The Disciplinary Frame

Photographic Truths and the Capture of Meaning

Nonfiction, Art & Architecture, Photography, Pictorials, History
Cover of the book The Disciplinary Frame by John Tagg, University of Minnesota Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Tagg ISBN: 9781452913902
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press Publication: January 28, 2009
Imprint: Univ Of Minnesota Press Language: English
Author: John Tagg
ISBN: 9781452913902
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication: January 28, 2009
Imprint: Univ Of Minnesota Press
Language: English

Photography can seem to capture reality and the eye like no other medium, commanding belief and wielding the power of proof. In some cases, a photograph itself is attributed the force of the real. How can a piece of chemically discolored paper have such potency? How does the meaning of a photograph become fixed? In The Disciplinary Frame, John Tagg claims that, to answer these questions, we must look at the ways in which all that frames photography—the discourse that surrounds it and the institutions that circulate it— determines what counts as truth.

The meaning and power of photographs, Tagg asserts, are discursive effects of the regimens that produce them as official record, documentary image, historical evidence, or art. Teasing out the historical processes involved, he examines a series of revealing case studies from nineteenth-century European and American photographs to Depression-era works by Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, and Margaret Bourke-White to the conceptualist photography of John Baldessari.

Central to this transformative work are questions of cultural strategy, the growth of the state, and broad issues of power and representation: how the discipline of the frame holds both photographic image and viewer in place, without erasing the possibility for evading, and even resisting, capture. Photographs, Tagg ultimately finds, are at once too big and too small for the frames in which they are enclosed—always saying more than is wanted and less than is desired.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Photography can seem to capture reality and the eye like no other medium, commanding belief and wielding the power of proof. In some cases, a photograph itself is attributed the force of the real. How can a piece of chemically discolored paper have such potency? How does the meaning of a photograph become fixed? In The Disciplinary Frame, John Tagg claims that, to answer these questions, we must look at the ways in which all that frames photography—the discourse that surrounds it and the institutions that circulate it— determines what counts as truth.

The meaning and power of photographs, Tagg asserts, are discursive effects of the regimens that produce them as official record, documentary image, historical evidence, or art. Teasing out the historical processes involved, he examines a series of revealing case studies from nineteenth-century European and American photographs to Depression-era works by Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange, and Margaret Bourke-White to the conceptualist photography of John Baldessari.

Central to this transformative work are questions of cultural strategy, the growth of the state, and broad issues of power and representation: how the discipline of the frame holds both photographic image and viewer in place, without erasing the possibility for evading, and even resisting, capture. Photographs, Tagg ultimately finds, are at once too big and too small for the frames in which they are enclosed—always saying more than is wanted and less than is desired.

More books from University of Minnesota Press

Cover of the book Digital Stockholm Syndrome in the Post-Ontological Age by John Tagg
Cover of the book Tactical Media by John Tagg
Cover of the book The Way Things Go by John Tagg
Cover of the book Whiskey Breakfast by John Tagg
Cover of the book Brown Threat by John Tagg
Cover of the book Modernism's Visible Hand by John Tagg
Cover of the book Who Writes for Black Children? by John Tagg
Cover of the book Thirty Rooms to Hide In by John Tagg
Cover of the book Designing the Creative Child by John Tagg
Cover of the book Mark My Words by John Tagg
Cover of the book At the Borders of Sleep by John Tagg
Cover of the book Badiou by John Tagg
Cover of the book Starting and Running a Nonprofit Organization by John Tagg
Cover of the book Off the Network by John Tagg
Cover of the book Like a Loaded Weapon by John Tagg
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy