This paper traces the impact of technology on vernacular photography and the moving image, exploring technologies relationship to identity and the urban. In the mid-19th century, the era that saw the birth of photography, the poet Charles Baudelaire wrote a portrait of the flâneur as a reconnoiter of the city. In the 1920’s Walter Benjamin proposed that Baudelaire’s flâneur was significant in the developing concept of modernity and urbanization, and that the rise of consumer capitalism in the early 20th century signalled the demise of the flâneur (1983). Today we may challenge Benjamin’s proposition, as nothing signifies current consumer culture than the smart phone, the ubiquitous symbol of the era: these devices with GPS geotagging, utili...
The so-called ‘digital revolution’ poses immense challenges as well as new opportunities for photog...
Taking photographs seems no longer primarily an act of memory intended to safeguard a family's picto...
We are living in a moment where new types of visuality and vernaculars are emerging. For many of us ...
This paper traces the impact of technology on vernacular photography and the moving image, exploring...
In the mid-19th century, the era that saw the birth of photography, the poet Charles Baudelaire wrot...
This paper discusses the convergence of media technologies, participation culture and the new vernac...
The convergence of the camera and mobile phone has proved to be highly popular. This should come as ...
Smart phones are ubiquitous; light, portable and indispensable. The spatial, perceptive and visual c...
This paper examines how mobile technologies are impacting the practice of photography. Social media ...
William J Mitchell stated that on its 150th anniversary in 1989 photography was dead, at least as it...
Increasingly, snapshots taken with mobile phone appear to be living a less autonomous life, as they ...
Contemporary society is overwhelmed with images. Personal photography has in recent decades gone thr...
The smartphone plays a significant role in media convergence, and smartphone photography is reconstr...
Throughout the 1990s the relationship between culture and technology was sharply focused in a debate...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
The so-called ‘digital revolution’ poses immense challenges as well as new opportunities for photog...
Taking photographs seems no longer primarily an act of memory intended to safeguard a family's picto...
We are living in a moment where new types of visuality and vernaculars are emerging. For many of us ...
This paper traces the impact of technology on vernacular photography and the moving image, exploring...
In the mid-19th century, the era that saw the birth of photography, the poet Charles Baudelaire wrot...
This paper discusses the convergence of media technologies, participation culture and the new vernac...
The convergence of the camera and mobile phone has proved to be highly popular. This should come as ...
Smart phones are ubiquitous; light, portable and indispensable. The spatial, perceptive and visual c...
This paper examines how mobile technologies are impacting the practice of photography. Social media ...
William J Mitchell stated that on its 150th anniversary in 1989 photography was dead, at least as it...
Increasingly, snapshots taken with mobile phone appear to be living a less autonomous life, as they ...
Contemporary society is overwhelmed with images. Personal photography has in recent decades gone thr...
The smartphone plays a significant role in media convergence, and smartphone photography is reconstr...
Throughout the 1990s the relationship between culture and technology was sharply focused in a debate...
Twenty two years since the arrival of the first consumer digital camera (Tatsuno 36) Western culture...
The so-called ‘digital revolution’ poses immense challenges as well as new opportunities for photog...
Taking photographs seems no longer primarily an act of memory intended to safeguard a family's picto...
We are living in a moment where new types of visuality and vernaculars are emerging. For many of us ...