Defending the Candid Gaze: Theory, the Archive, and Depolicing Street Photography

IF 0.2 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
P. Mountfort
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Since practically the dawn of photography, there have been concerns over street photography’s invasive and potentially exploitive nature, from late nineteenth-century tropes of pests and “sneaky characters” trailing women in public parks to more recent panics over “camera fiends” and even state security warnings of the need to be vigilant of photographers potentially casing infrastructure for terrorist attacks. This article argues, using potted history and critical theory, that such straw-man arguments distract from the real dangers that the policing and curtailment of public photography pose, characteristic, as they are, of authoritarian regimes where control over taking and circulating images is an integral part of oppressive state and corporate apparatuses. Street photography’s implicit role in the construction of an archive of aesthetic and documentary value can be understood as a type of resistance to such threatened microfascisms.
捍卫坦率的目光:理论、档案和去殖民化街头摄影
实际上,自摄影术诞生以来,人们就一直担心街头摄影具有侵犯性和潜在剥削性,从十九世纪末关于害虫和 "鬼鬼祟祟的人物 "在公共公园尾随妇女的说法,到最近对 "照相机狂魔 "的恐慌,甚至国家安全警告需要警惕摄影师为恐怖袭击对基础设施进行潜在跟踪。这篇文章利用历史和批判理论论证了这些草包论调转移了人们对公共摄影的监管和限制所带来的真正危险的注意力,因为它们是专制政权的特征,在专制政权中,对拍摄和传播图像的控制是压迫性国家和企业机构不可分割的一部分。街头摄影在构建具有美学和文献价值的档案方面所扮演的隐含角色,可以被理解为是对这种受到威胁的微观法西斯主义的一种抵抗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture
Journal of Asia-Pacific Pop Culture HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
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