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Glitchy vision : a feminist history of the social photo

Title
Glitchy vision : a feminist history of the social photo / Amanda K. Greene.
ISBN
0262381257
9780262381253
9780262550826
Publication
Cambridge : The MIT Press, 2024
Physical Description
1 online resource (216 pages) : illustrations
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
A novel exploration of popular photographic media cultures in 1930s Europe through a feminist lens -- and how visual social media changes what it means to be human both then and now. Glitchy Vision takes a feminist approach to media history to examine how photographic social media cultures change human bodies and the experience of being human. Amanda Greene explains how change is not always revolutionary, but instead can occur on an everyday basis through the glitches new media introduce. To illuminate these glitches, Greene's media history centers the inevitable distortions that arise from looking at the past from the vantage point of the present. Treating these distortions as tools as opposed to obstacles, Greene uncovers new ways of viewing social media cultures of the past, while also revealing parallels between historical contexts and our contemporary digital media environment. Greene uses three "born-digital keywords" -- real-time, algorithmic filters, and sousveillance-- to examine photographic media environments in and around 1930s Europe. Each chapter of the book places one of the keywords in dialogue with an unconventional archive of popular "feminized" cultural artifacts and technological innovations from this historical moment that have been overlooked as critical resources for media studies: Evelyn Waugh's bestselling novel Vile Bodies (1930) and photographic reproductions for the tabloid press; Lee Miller's war photography for British Vogue and glamourous photo-retouching techniques; and, the Mass-Observation Movement's surrealist anthropology and compact rangefinder cameras like the Leica II. Glitchy Vision provides new strategies for reading history that illuminate how small shifts in the circuits that connect bodies and media affect what it means to be human both in the past and today.
Variant and related titles
MIT Press Direct eBooks 2024.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
June 12, 2024
Series
The MIT Press
Citation

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