Cover image for Doing family photography : the domestic, the public, and the politics of sentiment
Title:
Doing family photography : the domestic, the public, and the politics of sentiment
Series:
Re-materialising cultural geography
Publication Information:
Farnham, Surrey, UK ; Burlington, VT : Ashgate, c2010
Physical Description:
158 p. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780754677321

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30000010251578 TR183 D65 2010 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Family photography, a ubiquitous domestic tradition in the developed world, is now more popular than ever thanks to the development of digital photography. Once uploaded to PCs and other gadgets, photographs may be stored, deleted, put in albums, sent to relatives and friends, retouched, or put on display. Moreover, in recent years family photographs are more frequently appearing in public media: on posters, in newspapers and on the Internet, particularly in the wake of disasters like 9/11, and in cases of missing children. Here, case study material drawn from the UK offers a deeper understanding of both domestic family photographs and their public display. Recent work in material culture studies, geography, and anthropology is used to approach photographs as objects embedded in social practices, which produce specific social positions, relations and effects. Also explored are the complex economies of gifting and exchange amongst families, and the rich geographies of domestic and public spaces into which family photography offers an insight.


Author Notes

Gillian Rose is Professor of Cultural Geography at the Open University, UK


Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction
How to look at family photographs: practices, objects, subjects and places
What is done with family snaps?
What happens with this doing? Family, domestic space and mothering
The circulation of family photographs in the visual economy
Family photos going public
The politics of sentiment: picturing the missing and the dead in London, July 2005
Looking again, ethically, at family snaps in the mass media
Conclusions: family photographs, domestic and public, and the contemporary visual economy
Bibliography
Index