Photography, Truth and Reconciliation
By (Author) Melissa Miles
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
16th May 2019
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Historiography
Social and cultural history
770
248
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
676g
Photography, Truth and Reconciliation charts the connections between photography and a crucial issue in contemporary social history. The book examines the prevalence of photography in cultural responses to processes of truth and reconciliation, and argues that photographs are a valuable means through which stories can be retold and historiography can be rethought. Five compelling case studies from Argentina, Canada, Australia, South Africa and Cambodia underscore the special role that this medium has played in facilitating processes of recovery, and in reconstructing suppressed histories, even when a documentary record of the events does not exist. The diverse practices addressed in this book including artistic, protest, institutional, archival, legal and personal photography prompt a new consideration of photographys links to presence, place, time, spectatorship and justice. Collectively, these practices attest to photographys key role in transitional justice, and in shaping historical understanding internationally. Important reading for students taking photography, visual culture, history and media studies courses, Photography, Truth and Reconciliation explores key historical and theoretical themes, including photography and testimony, international discourses on human rights and justice, and problematic notions of public and collective memory.
The central questionaddressed in depthis how one determines the truth of the sociopolitical past and how photography influences that determination... This is a useful, provocative text. * CHOICE *
Professor Melissa Miles is a photography historian and the Associate Dean, Research at Monash Universitys Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture, Australia. Her research explores the interdisciplinary qualities of photography and its movement across the domains of art, law, politics and history. The role of photographs in cross-cultural photographic relations is another key area of research interest. She is author of Pacific Exposures: Photography and the Australia-Japan Relationship (with Robin Gerster, 2018),The Language of Light and Dark: Light and Place in Australian Photography (2015), The Burning Mirror: Photography in an Ambivalent Light (2008), and co-editor of The Culture of Photography in Public Space (with Anne Marsh and Daniel Palmer, 2015).