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18: Reading Photographs - Truth, Lies, and Power Dynamics in Historical Photography

  • Page ID
    248584
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    In this chapter, you will be introduced to early photographic technologies and applications of that technology, especially in the late 19th century (1800s) and early 20th century (1900s). You will explore some visual and textual primary sources as well as secondary sources to shed light on applications of that technology, particularly within the context of "salvage ethnographic" photographic projects like that of Edward S. Curtis. Discussions will also focus on interrogating the "truth claim" (per Tom Gunning) that has been widely associated with photographs from their earliest days on into the present.

    sepia toned photographic portrait of an Indigenous woman standing and looking off to the right "Arapaho Maiden Edward S Curtis" by J. Paul Getty Museum is marked with CC0 1.0.

    Content Warning

    Please note that images depicting historical events may contain themes or include verbal descriptions which do not reflect current understandings of topics like race, gender, sexuality, (dis)ability status, and religious diversity. These are provided in a historical context.


    This page titled 18: Reading Photographs - Truth, Lies, and Power Dynamics in Historical Photography is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Erica McCormack and Jack Lindsay.