University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.Captured images draw the visual presence of what has been into the now, and so create sites of mourning where the past returns as the presence of absence. With an eye to photography as a haunting medium, this thesis asks how images in the networked smartphone ecology work to deny or intuit the medium’s capacity for returning history to the present. Every twenty-four hours just under four-hundred million shots are uploaded live to Facebook and Instagram, accentuating that networkers are “here and now,” even as a vast repository of data accumulates social media’s everyday records of departed experience. In this environment of photographic abundance, what are the modes of rem...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Photography is dead and that’s okay. Photography has always had a rather anxious relationship to the...
This article demonstrates the need always to consider change against continuity and continuity again...
Since its invention, photography has always maintained a close relationship with the concept of pres...
This paper explores how photographs have affected mourning processes in the past and how photo-techn...
This practice related research study explores my cognitive response to a biographical snapshot photo...
This thesis explores practices and experiences of using photography to support remembering. While t...
Photography has been used as a mnemonic since its early years. It has the power to move the past to ...
This thesis addresses the nature of the image and its relationship to human perception and memory. T...
This paper explores how photographs have affected mourning processes in the past and how photo-techn...
User-based research into the lived experiences associated with smartphone camera practices – in part...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Photography is dead and that’s okay. Photography has always had a rather anxious relationship to the...
This article demonstrates the need always to consider change against continuity and continuity again...
Since its invention, photography has always maintained a close relationship with the concept of pres...
This paper explores how photographs have affected mourning processes in the past and how photo-techn...
This practice related research study explores my cognitive response to a biographical snapshot photo...
This thesis explores practices and experiences of using photography to support remembering. While t...
Photography has been used as a mnemonic since its early years. It has the power to move the past to ...
This thesis addresses the nature of the image and its relationship to human perception and memory. T...
This paper explores how photographs have affected mourning processes in the past and how photo-techn...
User-based research into the lived experiences associated with smartphone camera practices – in part...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
Photography is dead and that’s okay. Photography has always had a rather anxious relationship to the...
This article demonstrates the need always to consider change against continuity and continuity again...