Susan Sontag, like the Italian writer Umberto Eco, is among the few present day cultural critics whose influence resonates, in part through their novels, beyond the intellectual press and university libraries. In 1977 Sontag published On Photography, an extended essay looking at the role of photography in the West, which went on to become her most celebrated book. Its publication came at the close of the Vietnam war, which brought documentary photography, via the media, to the breakfast tables and television screens of America and Europe. The book’s importance lay in the way it developed its readers’ relationship with the photographic image by introducing an accessible language in which to discuss the increasing torrent of images around us....
There are countless books on war photography, but most focus on dramatic images made by photojournal...
It is all but impossible to think of September 11th 2001 and not, at the same time, recall an image....
In one of her meditations on the photographs of war in her 2002 article for The New Yorker, ‘Looking...
This article looks at the role of photography and the processing of violence post 9/11 by examining ...
attention to the long-standing relationship between photography and modern war. Sontag was certainly...
Regarding the Pain of Others is a meditative analysis of the iconography of suffering by the late cu...
This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical cha...
Susan Sontag's book On Photography from 1977 marks an important point in the reception of photograph...
The commissioned extended review evaluated the exhibition and publication by Clement Cheroux, entitl...
This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical cha...
The essay is an explorative reflection that focuses on a very specific part of a broader investigati...
“A picture says a thousand words”, as the aphorism goes. This certainly applies to the realm of phot...
This essay argues that Susan Sontag's 1968 trip to Hanoi paved the way for her groundbreaking reflec...
For five years, Meredith Davenport has photographed and interviewed men who play live-action games b...
Combining case studies with theoretical and philosophical insights, this book explores the role of p...
There are countless books on war photography, but most focus on dramatic images made by photojournal...
It is all but impossible to think of September 11th 2001 and not, at the same time, recall an image....
In one of her meditations on the photographs of war in her 2002 article for The New Yorker, ‘Looking...
This article looks at the role of photography and the processing of violence post 9/11 by examining ...
attention to the long-standing relationship between photography and modern war. Sontag was certainly...
Regarding the Pain of Others is a meditative analysis of the iconography of suffering by the late cu...
This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical cha...
Susan Sontag's book On Photography from 1977 marks an important point in the reception of photograph...
The commissioned extended review evaluated the exhibition and publication by Clement Cheroux, entitl...
This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical cha...
The essay is an explorative reflection that focuses on a very specific part of a broader investigati...
“A picture says a thousand words”, as the aphorism goes. This certainly applies to the realm of phot...
This essay argues that Susan Sontag's 1968 trip to Hanoi paved the way for her groundbreaking reflec...
For five years, Meredith Davenport has photographed and interviewed men who play live-action games b...
Combining case studies with theoretical and philosophical insights, this book explores the role of p...
There are countless books on war photography, but most focus on dramatic images made by photojournal...
It is all but impossible to think of September 11th 2001 and not, at the same time, recall an image....
In one of her meditations on the photographs of war in her 2002 article for The New Yorker, ‘Looking...