The Photographic Invention of Whiteness: The Visual Cultures of White Atlantic Worlds

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Focusing on the creation of the concept of Whiteness, this study links early photographic imagery to the development and exploitation that were common in the colonial Atlantic World of the mid-to-late nineteenth century. With the advent of the daguerreotype in the mid-nineteenth century, White European settlers could imagine themselves as a supra-national community, where the attainment of wealth was rapidly becoming accessible through colonisation. Their dispersal throughout the colonial territories made possible the advent of a new representative type of Whiteness that eventually merged with the portrayal of modernity itself. Over time, the colonisation of the Atlantic World became synonymous with fascination itself within a European mind fixated upon both a racially subordinated world and the technical media through which it was represented. In the intervening centuries, images have acted as a medium of the imaginary, allowing for ideas around classification and the measurement of value to travel and to situate themselves as universal means. Contemporary societies still grapple with the residues of race, gender, class, and sexuality first established by the contrived mores of this representational medium, and those who were racialised by the camera as objects of fascination, curiosity, or concern have remained so well into the post-digital era. The book will be of interest to scholars working in history of photography, art history, colonialism, and critical race theory.

Author(s): Stephanie Polsky
Series: Routledge History of Photography
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 233
City: New York

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction: The Invention of a Photographic Whiteness
1. Daguerreotypes, the Vanishing Native American, and the Invention of Western Typologies
2. Mathew Brady’s Civil War, Daguerreotypes, and the Technological Redefinition of White Nationalism
3. Ain’t I a Human: Louis Agassiz’s Slave Daguerreotypes and White Scientific Voyeurism
4. How the West Was Won: America at the Great Exhibition of 1851
5. The Founding of the Great White World: The Arctic Daguerreotypes
6. White Aesthetics: Daguerreotypes in the Consolidation of Colonial Empires in West Africa
7. Lewis Carroll and the Imperial Eroticisation of White Childhood
8. Material Agency: The Eames Office, Race, and US Cold War Photographic Aesthetics
9. The Apple and the Anthropocene: The Whiteness of Silicon Valley’s Digital Ecologies
Conclusion: Entrepreneurs, Clients, and Images: How Photography Inserted Whiteness into a Global Visual Economy
Index