The before-and-after trope in photography has long paired images to represent change: whether affirmatively, as in the results of makeovers, social reforms or medical interventions, or negatively, in the destruction of the environment by the impacts of war or natural disasters. This interdisciplinary, multi-authored volume examines the central but almost unspoken position of before-and-after photography found in a wide range of contexts from the 19th century through to the present. Packed with case studies that explore the conceptual implications of these images, the book’s rich language of evidence, documentation and persuasion present both historical material and the work of practicing photographers who have deployed – and challenged – the conventions of the before-and-after pairing. Touching on issues including sexuality, race, environmental change and criminality, Before-and-After Photography examines major topics of current debate in the critique of photography in an accessible way to allow students and scholars to explore the rich conceptual issues around photography’s relationship with time andimagination.
Author(s): Jordan Bear, Kate Palmer Albers
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2017
Language: English
Pages: 236
Cover
Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors
1 Photography’s Time Zones
PART ONE MEDICAL RESTORATIONS AND ENHANCEMENTS
2 Before and After: The Aesthetic as Evidence in Nineteenth-Century Medical Photography
3 Imaging the Criminal Body: “Faces of Meth” and Galton’s Composite Photographs
PART TWO LANDSCAPE AND THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
4 “Noise Abatement Zone”: John Divola’s Photographic Fulcrum
5 The Elusive Event: Frank Gohlke in Conversation with Rebecca Senf
PART THREE NATURAL AND UNNATURAL DISASTERS
6 Beyond Images of Melting Ice: Hidden Histories of People, Place, and Time in Repeat Photography of Glaciers
7 Natural Cycles: Naoya Hatakeyama’s Photographs of the 2011 Tohoku Tsunami
PART FOUR SOCIAL “IMPROVEMENTS”: ASSIMILATION AND REFORM
8 Staging Emancipation: Race and Reconstruction in American Photographic Humor
9 Facing the Binary: Native American Students in the Camera’s Lens
PART FIVE FROM TWO TO THREE: BEFORE AND-AFTER TIME, COMPLICATED
10 Beyond “This-Caused-That”: The Temporal Complexities of Before-and-After Photographs
Afterword
Index