Social Uses of Photography - Images in the Age of Reproducibility (Hardcover, illustrated edition)


The book samples the richness of the cultural discourse in the United States, Weimar Germany, and the Soviet Union and suggests the need for a decentered media history that relies on the process of articulation in society.. In the Company of Media takes media history into the realm of cultural narratives to search for alternative conceptualizations in the discourse of media uses and practices. With the emergence of new media technologies in the 1920s and 1930s, like radio and photography, and the transformation of older ones, like the press, come new understandings of communication in society. The book samples the richness of the cultural discourse in the United States, Weimar Germany, and the Soviet Union and suggests the need for a decentered media history that relies on the process of articulation in society. } In the Company of Media advances the idea of a new media history that has its roots in the cultural discourse of society where it privileges the articulation of media uses and practices. It contains a number of essays that address the rise of new technologiessuch as radio and photographyand the transformation of old onessuch as newspapersduring the 1920s and 1930s, a period of social and political change in the United States, Germany, and the Soviet Union.How do artists, writers, and journalists articulate a new media culture? What happens when media are separated from their institutional definitions and reconstructed in ways that reflect the specific needs or purposes of their users? And what are the images of media that appear in the respective public narratives of a culture?The book offers examples of cultural constructions of communication in a modern world. They range from the place of newspapers in urban America, the transformation of news work in the Soviet Union, and the conditions of photojournalism in Germany, to explanations of radio, both in the United States and Germany. The resulting textsinformed by artistic expressions and social commentariesconstitute surface phenomena of a culture in the margins of dominant explanations of media uses and practices. Their appearance constitutes the articulated consciousness of an increasing media presence in the discourse of society and is a response to the rise of new means of communication.By proffering the potential of a decentered media history, the book suggests a turn from institutional explanations to cultural expressions of media uses and practices at specific historical moments of a societal discourse. }

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The book samples the richness of the cultural discourse in the United States, Weimar Germany, and the Soviet Union and suggests the need for a decentered media history that relies on the process of articulation in society.. In the Company of Media takes media history into the realm of cultural narratives to search for alternative conceptualizations in the discourse of media uses and practices. With the emergence of new media technologies in the 1920s and 1930s, like radio and photography, and the transformation of older ones, like the press, come new understandings of communication in society. The book samples the richness of the cultural discourse in the United States, Weimar Germany, and the Soviet Union and suggests the need for a decentered media history that relies on the process of articulation in society. } In the Company of Media advances the idea of a new media history that has its roots in the cultural discourse of society where it privileges the articulation of media uses and practices. It contains a number of essays that address the rise of new technologiessuch as radio and photographyand the transformation of old onessuch as newspapersduring the 1920s and 1930s, a period of social and political change in the United States, Germany, and the Soviet Union.How do artists, writers, and journalists articulate a new media culture? What happens when media are separated from their institutional definitions and reconstructed in ways that reflect the specific needs or purposes of their users? And what are the images of media that appear in the respective public narratives of a culture?The book offers examples of cultural constructions of communication in a modern world. They range from the place of newspapers in urban America, the transformation of news work in the Soviet Union, and the conditions of photojournalism in Germany, to explanations of radio, both in the United States and Germany. The resulting textsinformed by artistic expressions and social commentariesconstitute surface phenomena of a culture in the margins of dominant explanations of media uses and practices. Their appearance constitutes the articulated consciousness of an increasing media presence in the discourse of society and is a response to the rise of new means of communication.By proffering the potential of a decentered media history, the book suggests a turn from institutional explanations to cultural expressions of media uses and practices at specific historical moments of a societal discourse. }

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Product Details

General

Imprint

WestviewPress

Country of origin

United States

Series

Critical Studies in Communication & in Cultural Industries

Release date

October 1999

Availability

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Authors

Dimensions

229 x 153mm (L x W)

Format

Hardcover

Pages

208

Edition

illustrated edition

ISBN-13

978-0-8133-1422-8

Barcode

9780813314228

Categories

LSN

0-8133-1422-4



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