Book

The documentary impulse

by  Stuart Franklin

Description

Stuart Franklin took one of the most powerful photographs of the twentieth century - the 'tank man' in Tiananmen Square, Beijing, 1989. From his insightful position as a photographer, Franklin explores why we are driven to visually document our experiences and the world around us. He focuses on photography but traces this universal need through art, literature and science. Looking at photojournalism, war photography and work recording our culture, Franklin identifies some of its driving impulses: curiosity, outrage, reform and ritual; the search for evidence, for beauty, for therapy; and the immortalization of memory. As our understanding of 'documentary' continues to expand, Franklin considers photographic staging - where, perhaps, the future of the genre may lie: in search of truth over fact

Table Of Contents

  • 1.Beginnings: From Art To Photography
  • 2.Lost Eden: Traces Of The Colonial Legacy
  • 3.Photography's Bid For A Better World?
  • 4.Of War And Famine
  • 5.Taking Sides: Conflict And Civil Society
  • 6.(Re)Interpreting Everyday Life
  • 7.On Visual Poetry And Ambiguity
  • 8.Manipulation, Staging And The Future Of Documentary Photography

Subject

History and criticism / Documentary films / Documentary photography / Photojournalism

Details

Published London Phaidon, 2016
Language English
Material 214 p.
ISBN 0714870676 / 9780714870670
Location
TCDC Bangkok - General Collection

Related To This Item

สื่ออื่นๆ ที่เกี่ยวข้อง


You May Also Like

แนะนำสื่ออื่นๆ ที่น่าสนใจ


Your Recent Views

สื่ออื่นๆ ที่คุณเพิ่งดู