In this dissertation, I consider an intricate network of photographic images of African Americans produced by a racially diverse yet historically and geographically specific group of photographers that circulated in such physical spaces as the print media, sociological studies, and New York art exhibitions as well as less tangible ones, including systems of beliefs and points of view. In selecting this group of photographers and discursive spaces, however, I do not try to be comprehensive about any of the photographers or the circumstances in which their images were exhibited or reproduced. Rather I use this network of representations to address the specific set of social and material conditions surrounding the production an...
Reprint of a chapter from Warworks: 1994 and a section from Look at me: 1998: Fashion Was the Least...
During the summer of 2000, the New York Historical Society enjoyed its biggest continuing attendanc...
Abstract: The author argues that visual methods are at the crossroads. They can remain in a niche or...
In this dissertation, I consider an intricate network of photographic images of African Americans ...
grantor: University of TorontoDocumentary photography of the Civil Rights movement is curr...
This dissertation considers the work of African American artists Carrie Mae Weems and Romare Bearden...
This thesis addresses the multiple ways in which the medium of photography, and specifically the por...
This dissertation examines the professional lives of African American studio photographers, recoveri...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
<p>This dissertation investigates the social, emotional, and ethical implications of looking at the ...
In this thesis I explore photographic attempts by African American women artists to produce experime...
textThis dissertation contextualizes and interprets several hundred photographs illustrating six boo...
<p>This dissertation, Loïs Mailou Jones, Diasporic Art Practice, and Africa in the 20th Century, inv...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The purpose of my study is to investigate, through in-depth phenomenological interviews, the methods...
Reprint of a chapter from Warworks: 1994 and a section from Look at me: 1998: Fashion Was the Least...
During the summer of 2000, the New York Historical Society enjoyed its biggest continuing attendanc...
Abstract: The author argues that visual methods are at the crossroads. They can remain in a niche or...
In this dissertation, I consider an intricate network of photographic images of African Americans ...
grantor: University of TorontoDocumentary photography of the Civil Rights movement is curr...
This dissertation considers the work of African American artists Carrie Mae Weems and Romare Bearden...
This thesis addresses the multiple ways in which the medium of photography, and specifically the por...
This dissertation examines the professional lives of African American studio photographers, recoveri...
This thesis engages with the ongoing debate regarding how photographs can co...
<p>This dissertation investigates the social, emotional, and ethical implications of looking at the ...
In this thesis I explore photographic attempts by African American women artists to produce experime...
textThis dissertation contextualizes and interprets several hundred photographs illustrating six boo...
<p>This dissertation, Loïs Mailou Jones, Diasporic Art Practice, and Africa in the 20th Century, inv...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The purpose of my study is to investigate, through in-depth phenomenological interviews, the methods...
Reprint of a chapter from Warworks: 1994 and a section from Look at me: 1998: Fashion Was the Least...
During the summer of 2000, the New York Historical Society enjoyed its biggest continuing attendanc...
Abstract: The author argues that visual methods are at the crossroads. They can remain in a niche or...