Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics / Rob Coley & Dean Lockwood.

It's easy to forget there's a war on when the front line is everywhere encrypted in plain sight. Gathered in this book's several chapters are dispatches on the role of photography in a War Universe, a space and time in which photographers such as Hilla Becher, Don McCullin and Eadwear...

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Place / Publishing House:Baltimore, Maryland : : Project Muse,, 2020
©2020
Year of Publication:2016
2020
Language:English
Physical Description:a 1 online resource (173 pages) :; illustrations; PDF, digital file(s).
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(OAPEN)1004623
(OCoLC)1183978121
(MdBmJHUP)muse87201
(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/32424
(EXLCZ)994100000000981193
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spelling Coley, Rob, author.
Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics Rob Coley & Dean Lockwood.
Brooklyn, NY punctum books 2016
Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2020
©2020
a 1 online resource (173 pages) : illustrations; PDF, digital file(s).
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
text file rda
Also available in print form.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 165-173).
Circle of confusion -- Tricks learned after the crash -- Dispatches -- The Holiday Inn -- csi Düsseldorf -- I am Muybridge -- On paraphotography.,
It's easy to forget there's a war on when the front line is everywhere encrypted in plain sight. Gathered in this book's several chapters are dispatches on the role of photography in a War Universe, a space and time in which photographers such as Hilla Becher, Don McCullin and Eadweard Muybridge exist only insofar as they are a mark of possession, in the sway of larger forces. These photographers are conceptual personae that collectively fabulate a different kind of photography, a paraphotography in which the camera produces negative abyssal flashes or 'endarkenment.' In his Vietnam War memoir, Dispatches, Michael Herr imagines a 'dropped camera' receiving 'jumping and falling' images, images which capture the weird indivisibility of medium and mediated in a time of war. The movies and the war, the photographs and the torn bodies, fused and exchanged. Reporting from the chaos at the middle of things, Herr invokes a kind of writing attuned to this experience. Photography in the Middle, eschewing a high theoretical mode, seeks to exploit the bag of tricks that is the dispatch. The dispatch makes no grand statement about the progress of the war. Cultivating the most perverse implications of its sources, it tries to express what the daily briefing never can. Ports of entry in the script we're given, odd and hasty little glyphs, unhelpful rips in the cover story, dispatches are futile, dark intuitions, an expeditious inefficacy. They are bleak but necessary responses to an indifferent world in which any action whatever has little noticeable effect.As luck would have it, Photography in the Middle begins with some nasty accidents, and extracts from the wreckage a few lessons learned. Dusting itself off, it ships out and puts up with a bunch of battle scarred, big gun photojournalists in the Holiday Inn of a typical world city. Later, it immerses itself within the leaked files of an enigmatic police cabal which detail the surveillance of conceptual photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher, an operation that even extends to the duo's dreams. Further back in time, in 1897, we are invited to an inflammatory, yet patchily documented public lecture given by the Titan, Muybridge.More than any other, it is William Burroughs, conceived here as a war photographer, who is our tutelary figure, hovering over all these pages in his attempt to map emergent vectors of mediation, ever more intimate forms of control and accelerants of planetary catastrophe. Burroughs believed that it was necessary to both keep pace with and formulate new vectors, vectors that might act as intersections with a nonhuman outside. Photography has an agency of its own, one that scrambles the patterns and refrains of mediation upon which human life is based, glitching the human and provoking relations with external coordinates. With Burroughs, and other inspirations such as J.G. Ballard, Georges Bataille, Tom McCarthy and Eugene Thacker, our notion of the dispatch does not offer positive knowledge of something that we can reconcile with existing rational explanations, but rather the revelation of a nightside, our redundancy in a photography that suspends all operations in a general blindness.
Description based on print version record.
English
Photography Technique.
Photography Philosophy.
Electronic books.
photography
media studies
cultural theory
science fiction
William Burroughs
Lockwood, Dean, author.
0-9982375-1-5
language English
format eBook
author Coley, Rob,
Lockwood, Dean,
spellingShingle Coley, Rob,
Lockwood, Dean,
Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics
Circle of confusion -- Tricks learned after the crash -- Dispatches -- The Holiday Inn -- csi Düsseldorf -- I am Muybridge -- On paraphotography.,
author_facet Coley, Rob,
Lockwood, Dean,
Lockwood, Dean,
author_variant r c rc
d l dl
author_role VerfasserIn
VerfasserIn
author2 Lockwood, Dean,
author2_role TeilnehmendeR
author_sort Coley, Rob,
title Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics
title_full Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics Rob Coley & Dean Lockwood.
title_fullStr Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics Rob Coley & Dean Lockwood.
title_full_unstemmed Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics Rob Coley & Dean Lockwood.
title_auth Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics
title_new Photography in the Middle: Dispatches on Media Ecologies and Aesthetics
title_sort photography in the middle: dispatches on media ecologies and aesthetics
publisher punctum books
Project Muse,
publishDate 2016
2020
physical a 1 online resource (173 pages) : illustrations; PDF, digital file(s).
Also available in print form.
contents Circle of confusion -- Tricks learned after the crash -- Dispatches -- The Holiday Inn -- csi Düsseldorf -- I am Muybridge -- On paraphotography.,
isbn 0-9982375-1-5
callnumber-first T - Technology
callnumber-subject TR - Photography
callnumber-label TR183
callnumber-sort TR 3183 C657 42016
genre Electronic books.
genre_facet Electronic books.
illustrated Not Illustrated
oclc_num 1183978121
work_keys_str_mv AT coleyrob photographyinthemiddledispatchesonmediaecologiesandaesthetics
AT lockwooddean photographyinthemiddledispatchesonmediaecologiesandaesthetics
status_str c
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The dispatch makes no grand statement about the progress of the war. Cultivating the most perverse implications of its sources, it tries to express what the daily briefing never can. Ports of entry in the script we're given, odd and hasty little glyphs, unhelpful rips in the cover story, dispatches are futile, dark intuitions, an expeditious inefficacy. They are bleak but necessary responses to an indifferent world in which any action whatever has little noticeable effect.As luck would have it, Photography in the Middle begins with some nasty accidents, and extracts from the wreckage a few lessons learned. Dusting itself off, it ships out and puts up with a bunch of battle scarred, big gun photojournalists in the Holiday Inn of a typical world city. Later, it immerses itself within the leaked files of an enigmatic police cabal which detail the surveillance of conceptual photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher, an operation that even extends to the duo's dreams. 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