The indigenous lens? : early photography in the Near and Middle East

The historiography of early photography has scarcely examined Islamic countries in the Near and Middle East, although the new technique was adopted very quickly there by the 1840s.Which regional, local, and global aspects can be made evident?.

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Hlavní autoři: Ritter, Markus, Scheiwiller, Staci Gem
Médium: E-kniha Kniha
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Berlin De Gruyter 2018
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Vydání:1
Edice:Studies in Theory and History of Photography
Témata:
ISBN:3110491354, 9783110491357
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Obsah:
  • Intro -- Contents -- FOREWORD -- NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION -- Introduction: Early Photography in the Near and Middle East and the Notion of an "Indigenous Lens" -- Histories -- The Search for an Ottoman Vernacular Photography -- Photography during the Qajar Era, 1842-1925 -- Biographies -- Geographies Traced and Histories Told: Photographic Documentation of Land and People by ʿAbdollah Mirza Qajar, 1880s-1890s -- Early Photography of the Holy Sites of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula -- Relocating Sevruguin: Contextualizing the Political Climate of the Iranian Photographer Antoin Sevruguin (c. 1851-1933) -- Practices -- The Ottoman in Ottoman Photography: Producing Identity through its Negation -- Written Images: Poems On Early Iranian Portrait Studio Photography (1864-1930) and Constitutional Revolution Postcards (1905-1911) -- The Gate of the Bosporus: Early Photographs of Istanbul and the Dolmabahçe Palace -- The Heroic Lens: Portrait Photography of Ottoman Insurgents in the Nineteenth-Century Balkans-Types and Uses -- lass Plates and Kodak Cameras: Arab Amateur Photography in the "Era of Film" -- Archives -- The Photography Studio of the Naseri Harem in Nineteenth-Century Iran -- The Photograph Alb ums of the Royal Golestan Palace: A Window into the Soci al Hi story of Iran during the Qajar Era -- How a Former Museum of Modern Art Curator Assembled an International History of Photography Collection for Iran in the 1970s -- Works Cited -- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
  • Relocating Sevruguin: Contextualizing the Political Climate of the Iranian Photographer Antoin Sevruguin (c. 1851–1933)
  • Contents --
  • lass Plates and Kodak Cameras: Arab Amateur Photography in the “Era of Film”
  • The Heroic Lens: Portrait Photography of Ottoman Insurgents in the Nineteenth-Century Balkans—Types and Uses
  • The Gate of the Bosporus: Early Photographs of Istanbul and the Dolmabahçe Palace
  • FOREWORD --
  • Mohammad Sattari, Khadijeh Mohammadi Nameghi --
  • Written Images: Poems On Early Iranian Portrait Studio Photography (1864–1930) and Constitutional Revolution Postcards (1905–1911)
  • Introduction: Early Photography in the Near and Middle East and the Notion of an “Indigenous Lens”
  • Markus Ritter, Staci G. Scheiwiller --
  • Archives --
  • Esra Akcan --
  • Staci G. Scheiwiller --
  • Elahe Helbig --
  • Alireza Nabipour, Reza Sheikh --
  • Carmen Pérez González --
  • Practices --
  • Claude W. Sui --
  • LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
  • Early Photography of the Holy Sites of Islam in the Arabian Peninsula
  • The Ottoman in Ottoman Photography: Producing Identity through its Negation
  • Donna Stein --
  • How a Former Museum of Modern Art Curator Assembled an International History of Photography Collection for Iran in the 1970s
  • Geographies Traced and Histories Told: Photographic Documentation of Land and People by ʿAbdollah Mirza Qajar, 1880s–1890s
  • Stephen Sheehi --
  • The Photograph Alb ums of the Royal Golestan Palace: A Window into the Soci al Hi story of Iran during the Qajar Era
  • Works Cited --
  • Photography during the Qajar Era, 1842–1925
  • Mohammadreza Tahmasbpour --
  • NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION --
  • Wendy M. K. Shaw --
  • Edhem Eldem --
  • The Search for an Ottoman Vernacular Photography
  • Histories --
  • Martina Baleva --
  • Frontmatter --
  • Biographies --
  • The Photography Studio of the Naseri Harem in Nineteenth-Century Iran