This project considers the ambivalent uses of contemporary ruin photography (pejoratively known as \u22ruin porn\u22) in Detroit, Michigan. Although ruin photographers emphatically deny historical context in favor of sensationalism, they participate in a cycle of victim blaming that can be traced to the 1960s. News media coverage of the 1967 Twelfth Street riot in Detroit used photographs that documented the melee in order to thrust blame upon inner-city black citizens for their participation in the riot. At the same time, these sources acknowledged the structural inequalities in Detroit that preceded the riot, including segregated housing practices, unequal access to education and employment, and police brutality. In a similar fashion, pop...
This article considers photographs of New York by two American radical groups, the revolutionary Wor...
In 2013, Detroit became the largest municipality in the United States to ever file for Chapter 9 ban...
Ruin pornography – the photographic aestheticization of architectural decay – has a long history in ...
From images of major transport infrastructures and housing blocks, to drug rehabilitation centers, v...
This project examines the politics of representation in The Ruins of Detroit, a book of photography ...
This thesis examines the role of images in the construction of urban geographical knowledge. In rec...
This article contributes to scholarship on urban visual culture by advancing understandings of how v...
Much has been written in recent years about ruins and photography and especially so in the context o...
This study seeks to investigate the relationship between urban-revitalization and public- art in Det...
Once the manufacturing powerhouse of the nation, Detroit has become emblematic of failing cities eve...
Detroit’s perceived social and industrial degeneration has been matched by an unfortunate aestheti...
By depicting urban decay and ecological crisis, ruin imagery shows the people and places that capita...
The purpose of this study was to examine how photographs from Andrew Moore’s “Detroit Disassembled” ...
The population of Detroit has been steadily declining since the 1950s, but the imaginaries that shap...
<p>This dissertation is a social history of the city of Detroit in the 1970s. Using archives officia...
This article considers photographs of New York by two American radical groups, the revolutionary Wor...
In 2013, Detroit became the largest municipality in the United States to ever file for Chapter 9 ban...
Ruin pornography – the photographic aestheticization of architectural decay – has a long history in ...
From images of major transport infrastructures and housing blocks, to drug rehabilitation centers, v...
This project examines the politics of representation in The Ruins of Detroit, a book of photography ...
This thesis examines the role of images in the construction of urban geographical knowledge. In rec...
This article contributes to scholarship on urban visual culture by advancing understandings of how v...
Much has been written in recent years about ruins and photography and especially so in the context o...
This study seeks to investigate the relationship between urban-revitalization and public- art in Det...
Once the manufacturing powerhouse of the nation, Detroit has become emblematic of failing cities eve...
Detroit’s perceived social and industrial degeneration has been matched by an unfortunate aestheti...
By depicting urban decay and ecological crisis, ruin imagery shows the people and places that capita...
The purpose of this study was to examine how photographs from Andrew Moore’s “Detroit Disassembled” ...
The population of Detroit has been steadily declining since the 1950s, but the imaginaries that shap...
<p>This dissertation is a social history of the city of Detroit in the 1970s. Using archives officia...
This article considers photographs of New York by two American radical groups, the revolutionary Wor...
In 2013, Detroit became the largest municipality in the United States to ever file for Chapter 9 ban...
Ruin pornography – the photographic aestheticization of architectural decay – has a long history in ...