The essay draws on two case studies from the photographic archive of British social anthropologist Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard (1902-73) on a fieldwork expedition to Kenya and South Sudan in 1936. The case studies reveal how connections can be made within an archive to articulate new narratives around often well-known photographs. The case studies explore the relationship between two different practices of looking: that involved in the act of photography, and that of looking at archival photographs as historical sources. Whilst the abundance of visual information in the archive reveals photography's endless potential for recodability, the essay argues that the photographic archive is also characterised by obscurity and limitation, and that ...
Historically conceived as a method of truthfully depicting reality, photography serves a critical fu...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
African photography has emerged as a significant focus of research and scholarship over the last twe...
Raw Histories is concerned with historical photographs in anthropology. Rather than seeing them mere...
This essay enters into a brief dialogue with the work of some scholars who mapped out the historiogr...
This project examines the limitations imposed by photography as an apparatus for enabling memory and...
Sir Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973) is widely considered the most influential British anthro...
This article explores invisibility and the unseen, as well as presence and visibility, in relation t...
This essay explores the use of visual material in anthropology and some of the problems it has raise...
Sir Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973) is widely considered the most influential British anthro...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The author offers a critical view on the relationship between photography and anthropology in Great ...
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
Generally, photographs are used in anthropology as documentary artefacts to support external narrati...
From the late nineteenth century, photography was inseparable from archaeological fieldwork, and obj...
Historically conceived as a method of truthfully depicting reality, photography serves a critical fu...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
African photography has emerged as a significant focus of research and scholarship over the last twe...
Raw Histories is concerned with historical photographs in anthropology. Rather than seeing them mere...
This essay enters into a brief dialogue with the work of some scholars who mapped out the historiogr...
This project examines the limitations imposed by photography as an apparatus for enabling memory and...
Sir Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973) is widely considered the most influential British anthro...
This article explores invisibility and the unseen, as well as presence and visibility, in relation t...
This essay explores the use of visual material in anthropology and some of the problems it has raise...
Sir Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973) is widely considered the most influential British anthro...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The author offers a critical view on the relationship between photography and anthropology in Great ...
In the mid-1990s, Jacques Derrida’s book Archive Fever (1995) sparked a lively theoretical debate th...
Generally, photographs are used in anthropology as documentary artefacts to support external narrati...
From the late nineteenth century, photography was inseparable from archaeological fieldwork, and obj...
Historically conceived as a method of truthfully depicting reality, photography serves a critical fu...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
African photography has emerged as a significant focus of research and scholarship over the last twe...