Description
This book asks how the existence of photographs has shaped our sense of history and therefore shaped historical methods and enquiry.
About the Author
Elizabeth Edwards is Professor Emerita of Photographic History at De Montfort University, Leicester, where she was Director of the Photographic History Research Centre from 2011- 2016. She is also Andrew W. Mellon Professor at the Victoria and Albert Museum Research Institute, London, and Honorary Professor in the Department of Anthropology University College London. Until 2005 she was Curator of Photographs at Pitt Rivers Museum and lecturer in visual anthropology at ISCA, University of Oxford, where she is Curator Emerita and Research Affiliate. In 2015 she was the first photographic specialist to be elected a Fellow of the British Academy. She has worked extensively on the relationship between photography, anthropology and history, on photographs and material culture, and on the work of photographs in museums, notably in colonial legacies. She has received many awards for her work and, over the years, has been on the boards many leading journals and of major museum and archival institutions. In addition to over 100 articles and essays, her monographs and edited works include Raw Histories (2001), Sensible Objects (2006), The Camera as Historian: Amateur Photographers and Historical Imagination 1880-1918 (2012) and Photographs, Museums, Collections (2015).
Reviews
The presence of photographs disrupts historical practice, and creates opportunities to re-think our relationship with the past. This is the argument Edwards, one of the world's leading photo historians, makes in this immensely powerful, dazzlingly learned, and eminently readable book. A must-read for every student of history! * Maiken Umbach, Professor of Modern History, University of Nottingham, UK *
This is a provocative exploration of the subtle synergies between photographs and historical sensibility, written by a major historian of photography. Above all, it is a plea to think afresh about how photographs have radically reshaped our understandings of time, space and history in irreversible ways. * Paul Betts, Professor of Modern European History, St Antony's College, University of Oxford, UK *
Through photographs, Edwards shoulders a multiplicity of conceptual and methodological threads-time, scale, presence, context, materiality-that all historians should approach with a new level of consciousness in their practice. Here, photographs are the alibi to address the real silences of history, opening floodgates of potentiality for its future practice. * Patricia Hayes, DSI/NRF SARChI Chair in Visual History & Theory, University of the Western Cape, South Africa *
Photographs and the Practice of History is a profound reflection on how photographs have defined our relationship to the past and its implications in the present, from the foremost scholar in the field. Deftly written and alive with questions on the nature of history itself, this is a book every historian, and anyone who works with photographs, should read. * Christina Riggs, Professor of the History of Visual Culture, Durham University, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9781350120655
Author Professor Elizabeth Edwards
Format Paperback
Page Count 184
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 234g