Monday, September 30, 2013
On Photography Summary
In
Susan Sontag’s “On Photography,” the author examines photography as an art
form, as well as the various places and roles it has taken up throughout its
history. At first, photography belonged only to a select few—those inventors and
experts who could operate the unusual contraptions that were the first cameras.
However, technology has evolved in such a way that now photography has come
into its own as an art form, but also has become something practiced by the
masses as a social tool. In the latter area, Sontag describes how photography
is used in tourism, as well as within the familial setting, as a way of memorializing
and chronicling life and experience. Sontag writes on the power of photography,
of how it provides most of the knowledge people have of the past and the
present, acting as slices of time and space that are miniatures of reality.
Photographs, while on the one hand are seen to be accurate portrayals of
reality, still maintain an ability to act as interpretations of the world, the
same as paintings and drawings. The world has become crowded with images—of
suffering, horror, momentous events, or everyday life—and in the process, the
world seems far more accessible than it truly is.
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