This paper explores a puzzle concerning the authority of certain images that increasingly find themselves at the center of legal disputes: surveillance or “real time” film images that purport to capture an event about which there is a dispute. Increasingly, this kind of “evidence verité” is used in United States courts of law as the best evidence of what happened. Film footage of arrests, criminal confessions, photographs of crime scenes (during and after) is routinely admitted into court as evidence. It tends to overwhelm all other evidence (e.g., testimonial or documentary) and be immune to critical analysis. Why would this be so? This paper situates this phenomenon in the current legal United States context, with a brief history of “evid...
As recent as the 1980’s, vigilance within the criminal justice system toward domestic violence prose...
Any one film can sustain a myriad of compelling interpretations. A collection of films, however, sha...
The American trial and American cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims t...
Maxims that urge the power of images are cultural commonplaces with which we are all too familiar: ...
Can a photograph demonstrate, reveal or prove what really happened? Certainly a photograph shows som...
Burden of Proof: The Construction of Visual Evidence examines the way photographic images have been ...
This Article exposes internal contradictions in case law concerning the use and admissibility of fil...
This Article exposes internal contradictions in case law concerning the use and admissibility of fil...
Two main theses are presented here. The first is that there is a conceptual resemblance between the ...
This paper is a critical essay about image data that will attempt to uncover the characteristics tha...
The American trial and the art of cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims...
Since its 19th century inception, photography has altered the image of law, changing how we make leg...
This paper offers two readings of a set of photographic images released in 2016 by the US Department...
This chapter explores the way in which mechanically or digitally acquired images (photographs and vi...
This article uses ideas propounded by Susan Sontag and Judith Butler on photography to illuminate th...
As recent as the 1980’s, vigilance within the criminal justice system toward domestic violence prose...
Any one film can sustain a myriad of compelling interpretations. A collection of films, however, sha...
The American trial and American cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims t...
Maxims that urge the power of images are cultural commonplaces with which we are all too familiar: ...
Can a photograph demonstrate, reveal or prove what really happened? Certainly a photograph shows som...
Burden of Proof: The Construction of Visual Evidence examines the way photographic images have been ...
This Article exposes internal contradictions in case law concerning the use and admissibility of fil...
This Article exposes internal contradictions in case law concerning the use and admissibility of fil...
Two main theses are presented here. The first is that there is a conceptual resemblance between the ...
This paper is a critical essay about image data that will attempt to uncover the characteristics tha...
The American trial and the art of cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims...
Since its 19th century inception, photography has altered the image of law, changing how we make leg...
This paper offers two readings of a set of photographic images released in 2016 by the US Department...
This chapter explores the way in which mechanically or digitally acquired images (photographs and vi...
This article uses ideas propounded by Susan Sontag and Judith Butler on photography to illuminate th...
As recent as the 1980’s, vigilance within the criminal justice system toward domestic violence prose...
Any one film can sustain a myriad of compelling interpretations. A collection of films, however, sha...
The American trial and American cinema share certain epistemological tendencies. Both stake claims t...