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[ecrea] new ecrea book - Digital Photography and Everyday Life (2016, Routledge).
Fri May 27 17:31:37 GMT 2016
New book: Digital Photography and Everyday Life (2016, Routledge)
Gómez Cruz, Edgar and Lehmuskallio, Asko (eds.), 2016. Digital
Photography and Everyday Life: Empirical Studies on Material Visual
Practices (Routledge Studies in European Communication Research and
Education). London and New York: Routledge, 296 pages.
https://www.routledge.com/Digital-Photography-and-Everyday-Life-Empirical-Studies-on-Material-Visual/Gomez-Cruz-Lehmuskallio/p/book/9781138899810
(For Routledge site: 20% discount code - enter the code FLR40 at checkout).
Ebook:
https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Photography-Everyday-Life-Communication-ebook/dp/B01FXZRSC4?ie=UTF8&me=&ref_=mt_kindle
Summary
With contributors from ten different countries and backgrounds in a
range of academic disciplines - including anthropology, media studies
and visual culture - this collection takes a uniquely broad perspective
on photography by situating the image-making process in wider
discussions on the materiality and visuality of photographic practices
and explores these through empirical case studies.
By focusing on material visual practices, the book presents a
comprehensive overview of some of the main challenges digital
photography is bringing to everyday life. It explores how the
digitization of photography has a wide-reaching impact on the use of the
medium, as well as on the kinds of images that can be produced and the
ways in which camera technology is developed. The exploration goes
beyond mere images to think about cameras, mediations and technologies
as key elements in the development of visual digital cultures.
Digital Photography and Everyday Life will be of great interest to
students and scholars of Photography, Contemporary Art, Visual Culture
and Media Studies, as well as those studying Communication, Cultural
Anthropology, and Science and Technology Studies.
Table of Contents
Foreword: Richard Chalfen
Why Material Visual Practices?
Asko Lehmuskallio and Edgar Gómez Cruz
Part I: VARIANCE IN USE IN EVERYDAY PHOTOGRAPHY
1."I’m a picture girl!" Mobile photography in Tanzania
Paula Uimonen
2."Today I dressed like this": selling clothes and playing for
celebrity. Self-representation and consumption on Facebook
Sara Pargana Mota
3. Amplification and Heterogeneity: Seniors and Digital Photographic
Practices
Maria Schreiber
4. Illness, death and grief: the daily experience of viewing and sharing
digital images
Montse Morcate and Rebeca Pardo
5. The Boston Marathon bombing investigation as an example of networked
journalism and power of big data analytics
Anssi Männistö
6. Variance in Everyday Photography
Karin Becker
Part II: CAMERAS, CONNECTIVITY AND TRANSFORMED LOCALITIES
7. Photographs of Place in Phonespace. Camera Phones as a Location-Aware
Mobile Technology
Mikko Villi
8. (Digital) Photography, Experience and Space in Transnational
Families. A Case Study of Spanish-Irish Families living in Ireland
Patricia Prieto Blanco
9. Visual politics and material semiotics: The digital camera’s
translation of political protest
Rune Saugmann Andersen
10. Linked Photography: A praxeological analysis of augemented reality
navigation in the early twentieth century
Tristan Thielmann
11. Photographic Places and Digital Wayfaring: conceptualizing
relationships between cameras, connectivities and transformed localities
Sarah Pink
Part III: CAMERA AS THE EXTENSION OF THE PHOTOGRAPHER
12. Exploring everyday photographic routines through the habit of Noticing
Eve Forrest
13. "Analogization": reflections on life-logging cameras, action cams
and images’ changing meaning in a digital landscape
Paolo Favero
14. Photo-genic assemblages: Photography as a connective interface
Edgar Gómez Cruz
15. The camera as a sensor among many: The visualization of everyday
digital photography as simulative, heuristic and layered pictures
Asko Lehmuskallio
16. Is the camera an extension of the Photographer?
Martin Lister
Outlook: Photographic Wayfaring, Now and to Come
Nancy Van House
Reviews
"This is an outstanding collection of essays which invites a radical
rethinking of photography. Each chapter dismantles conventional
understandings of photography by examining in detail a specific
assemblage of social practice, camera technology and light-generated
image. What photography is, what it does and what it might do is thus
rendered radically open, and photography is once more made as
remarkable, emergent and diverse as it was a century and a half ago.
Essential reading for anyone interested in photography and visual culture."
Gillian Rose, Professor of Cultural Geography, The Open University, and
Author of Visual Methodologies
"This exciting and multifaceted book casts new light on the practice of
photography. Highlighting the various processes of communication,
networking and human-nonhuman relationality in different parts of the
world, it shows the photographic medium as literally teeming with life.
This is a must-read not just for scholars and students of photography
but for anyone who reads the news, uses social media, moves from place
to place or owns a camera phone!"
Joanna Zylinska, Professor of New Media and Communications at
Goldsmiths, University of London, and Curator of Photomediations Machine
About the Editors
Edgar Gómez Cruz is a Vice-Chancellor Research Fellow at RMIT,
Melbourne. He has published widely on a number of topics relating to
digital culture, ethnography, and photography. His recent publications
include the book 'From Kodak Culture to Networked Image: An Ethnography
of Digital Photography Practices' (2012). Current research investigates
screen cultures and creative practices, which is funded through RCUK and
Vice Chancellor research grants.
Asko Lehmuskallio is Chair of the ECREA TWG Visual Cultures and founding
member of the Nordic Network for Digital Visuality. As senior researcher
at Universities of Tampere and Siegen, he specialises in visual culture,
mediated human action and networked cameras. Recent books include
'Pictorial Practices in a "Cam Era": Studying non-professional camera
use' (2012) and '#snapshot: Cameras amongst us' (co-ed, 2014).
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