This article demonstrates the need always to consider change against continuity and continuity against change in the analysis of mnemonic technologies. It does so by exploring what has happened in the move from analogue to digital photography, looking in particular at how this has affected the meanings of personal photographs and the practices of remembering associated with them. In contrast with technologically determinist perspectives which have been, however latently, manifest in writing on new media, the value of exploring vernacular photography as a specifically mnemonic practice is that it turns our attention to the ways in which photographic practices are bound up with longer-term social uses and cultural values. Our analysis focuses...
This thesis addresses the nature of the image and its relationship to human perception and memory. T...
Over the past two decades, memory, understood as both the act of remembering and a means of storing ...
This paper examines potential changes in the temporal experience of everyday digital media through t...
Photography has been used as a mnemonic since its early years. It has the power to move the past to ...
This thesis explores practices and experiences of using photography to support remembering. While t...
Taking photographs seems no longer primarily an act of memory intended to safeguard a family's picto...
Information stored in digital media literally and metaphorically loses its historical dimensions but...
This practice related research study explores my cognitive response to a biographical snapshot photo...
Since its invention, photography has always maintained a close relationship with the concept of pres...
My dissertation answers two questions: Does the tension between interactive technologies and rhetori...
Photography is often linked to memory as an issue of its failure. While the question of what is miss...
Vernacular photography can be broadly defined as “ordinary photographs, the ones made or bought (or ...
Objects, material or digital, mediate memories: they act as anchors in between temporal notions and ...
As digital media have become more pervasive and entrenched in our daily routines, a nostalgic counte...
This editorial contextualises the various articles that analyse some of the ways that memory has bec...
This thesis addresses the nature of the image and its relationship to human perception and memory. T...
Over the past two decades, memory, understood as both the act of remembering and a means of storing ...
This paper examines potential changes in the temporal experience of everyday digital media through t...
Photography has been used as a mnemonic since its early years. It has the power to move the past to ...
This thesis explores practices and experiences of using photography to support remembering. While t...
Taking photographs seems no longer primarily an act of memory intended to safeguard a family's picto...
Information stored in digital media literally and metaphorically loses its historical dimensions but...
This practice related research study explores my cognitive response to a biographical snapshot photo...
Since its invention, photography has always maintained a close relationship with the concept of pres...
My dissertation answers two questions: Does the tension between interactive technologies and rhetori...
Photography is often linked to memory as an issue of its failure. While the question of what is miss...
Vernacular photography can be broadly defined as “ordinary photographs, the ones made or bought (or ...
Objects, material or digital, mediate memories: they act as anchors in between temporal notions and ...
As digital media have become more pervasive and entrenched in our daily routines, a nostalgic counte...
This editorial contextualises the various articles that analyse some of the ways that memory has bec...
This thesis addresses the nature of the image and its relationship to human perception and memory. T...
Over the past two decades, memory, understood as both the act of remembering and a means of storing ...
This paper examines potential changes in the temporal experience of everyday digital media through t...