Photography, anthropology, and history : Expanding the frame / Christopher A. Morton & Elizabeth Edwards
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: London : Taylor & Francis Books, r 2022.Edition: 1st edDescription: xviii, 290 p.: illustrations; 15.6 x 23.4 x 2.54 cmISBN:- 9781032353562
- 22 306.4 MOR
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
General Books | CUTN Central Library Social Sciences | Non-fiction | 306.4 MOR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 47137 |
Introduction
PART I Historicizing Visual Anthropology
1 'Distempered Daubs' and Encyclopaedic World Maps: The Ethnographic Significance of Panoramas and Mappaemundi
2 Anthropology and the Cinematic Imagination
PART II Institutional Structures
3 Salvaging Our Past: Photography and Survival
4 Frozen Poses: Hamat'sa Dioramas, Recursive Representation, and the Making of a Kwakwaka'wakw Icon
Part III Fieldwork.
5 The Initiation of Kamanga: Visuality and Textuality in Evans-Pritchard's Zande Ethnography
6 'For Scientific Purposes a Stand Camera is Essential': Salvaging Photographic Histories in Papua
7 Visual Methods in Early Japanese Anthropology: Torii Ryuzo in Taiwan
8 Theodor Koch-Grunberg and Visual Anthropology in Early Twentieth-Century German Anthropology
PART IV Indigenous Histories
9 Faletau's Photocopy, or the Mutability of Visual History in Roviana
10 John Layard long Malakula 1914-1915: The Potency of Field Photography.
11 'Just by Bringing These Photographs ... ':
On the Other Meanings of Anthropological Images
As current research rethinks the relationship between photography and anthropology, this volume will serve as a stimulus to this new phase of research as an essential text and methodological reference point in any course that addresses the relationship between anthropology and visuality
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