On
Photography by Susan Sontag was originally published in 1977 and I have the
Penguin edition, published in London in 1979.
Sontag explains in her very brief introduction that the book is a
collection of her essays. She began with
one essay and, almost by chance, this led to another and another.... These essays were first published in The New York Review of Books.
The
blurb tells us that Sontag examines a wide range of problems, both aesthetic
and moral, raised by the presence and authority of the photographed image in
the lives of everyone in 1977. John
Berger in New Society says that it
was the most original and important work yet written on the subject. The
Washington Post says of it that it is a brilliant analysis of the profound
changes photographs have had in our way of looking at the world. It has been suggested that that the book is literary
and and contentious rather than being academic writing; it contains no
bibliography, for instance, and very few notes and there is no in depth analysis
of any one photographer and some critics such as writer and curator Colin
Westerbeck gave it a hostile reception.
I enjoyed the book and could have wished that I
had read it before writing my essay for Progressing with Digital Photography: The Rebirth of Pictorialism in Photography. Is a return
to Pictorialism Finally Threatening the Dominance of 'Straight' Photography? I would then have found the following quote
useful: "The cult of the future (of
faster and faster seeing) alienates with the wish to return to a more
artisanal, purer past when images still had a handmade quality, an aura."
and this: "....Right now there are mini-revivals of such long-despised
pictorialists from another era as Oscar Gustav Rejlander, Henry Peach Robinson
and Robert Demachy."
Another
quote with particular reference to my current work is: "Some photographers
set up as scientits, others as moralists.
The scientists make an inventory of the world; the moralists concentrate
on hard cases." I think that maybe
with the work I started on originally for my Body of Work is from the point of
view of photographer as scientist, documenting and recording nature (I like to
think well) rather than actually saying something, having a story to tell.
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