This seminar paper analyzes 19th century portrait photographs in British-India, which were mainly made by and addressed at British citizens. Regarding the wide range of genres, it can be shown that these photographs hardly give a realistic image of India, but instead reflect the contemporaneous British view on the colony and its native inhabitants. Photography was therefore an essential instrument of colonial policy. By creating a culturally inferior “other”, it helped legitimating the British rule over India
This article looks at how aesthetic concerns inflected the dynamic of imperial relations during the ...
The mid-Victorian era and the Edwardian period witnessed important advances in graphic arts leading ...
International audienceThis presentation will address the evolution of the visual rhetoric of Tamil c...
Photography was first introduced to India in 1840, only a year after the announcements of the daguer...
This article focuses on the deployment of the camera during a moment of acute political crisis in ni...
Among the many novel cultural technologies that the British introduced to the Himalayas in the secon...
The research sits in a gap between historical geography, colonial history, local micro-history and a...
The thesis considers nineteenth century photographic images of India and the Near East in relation t...
The cultural venue of European exhibitions in the late-nineteenth century enabled the promotion of t...
Advisors: Catherine Raymond.Committee members: Jane M. Ferguson; Rebecca Houze.Includes illustration...
Abstract By analyzing the history of a photograph taken in a Bombay photo studio in 1885, this artic...
This thesis researched the representation of British Indians in three types of visual media which we...
At the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1880, Val Prinsep’s vast group portrait of British and Indian rul...
This thesis focuses on an analysis of a family narrative that is imbricated with the development of ...
The British engagement with India was an intensely visual one. Images of the subcontinent, produced ...
This article looks at how aesthetic concerns inflected the dynamic of imperial relations during the ...
The mid-Victorian era and the Edwardian period witnessed important advances in graphic arts leading ...
International audienceThis presentation will address the evolution of the visual rhetoric of Tamil c...
Photography was first introduced to India in 1840, only a year after the announcements of the daguer...
This article focuses on the deployment of the camera during a moment of acute political crisis in ni...
Among the many novel cultural technologies that the British introduced to the Himalayas in the secon...
The research sits in a gap between historical geography, colonial history, local micro-history and a...
The thesis considers nineteenth century photographic images of India and the Near East in relation t...
The cultural venue of European exhibitions in the late-nineteenth century enabled the promotion of t...
Advisors: Catherine Raymond.Committee members: Jane M. Ferguson; Rebecca Houze.Includes illustration...
Abstract By analyzing the history of a photograph taken in a Bombay photo studio in 1885, this artic...
This thesis researched the representation of British Indians in three types of visual media which we...
At the Royal Academy Exhibition of 1880, Val Prinsep’s vast group portrait of British and Indian rul...
This thesis focuses on an analysis of a family narrative that is imbricated with the development of ...
The British engagement with India was an intensely visual one. Images of the subcontinent, produced ...
This article looks at how aesthetic concerns inflected the dynamic of imperial relations during the ...
The mid-Victorian era and the Edwardian period witnessed important advances in graphic arts leading ...
International audienceThis presentation will address the evolution of the visual rhetoric of Tamil c...