On the ruined image: questioning the materiality of the photograph and its role in depicting the process of recollection

Ceidra Moon Murphy
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Prompted by an encounter with an archive of microscopic scans produced by my grandfather in 1976, this paper analyses the potential of disintegrative photographic processes, which deliberately set out to interfere with, subvert and sabotage the original images, to make visible the fragmented state of our memory. Interrogating the work of Stephen Gill and Daisuke Yokota in tandem with theories surrounding the nature of memory and its relationship with photography, I suggest that through the acceptance of the photograph’s own decay and degradation, photography may more accurately depict the process of recollection than the recollection itself. With particular reference to cultural geographer, Caitlin DeSilvey, who disassociates decomposition from loss, this paper establishes the image’s disintegration as generative. It is within such practices, which are open to, and encouraging of, an entanglement with “other than human agencies” and time passing, that photographs depict a reality; the reality of how memories reside in our minds and are brought back into consciousness.
论被毁的影像:质疑照片的物质性及其在描述回忆过程中的作用
在我祖父1976年制作的显微镜扫描档案的启发下,本文分析了解体摄影过程的潜力,这些过程有意干扰、颠覆和破坏原始图像,使我们的记忆碎片化。我质疑斯蒂芬·吉尔和横田大辅的作品,以及围绕记忆的本质及其与摄影的关系的理论,认为通过接受照片自身的腐朽和退化,摄影可能比回忆本身更准确地描绘回忆的过程。本文特别参考了文化地理学家Caitlin DeSilvey,他将分解与损失脱钩,将图像的分解确立为生成性的。正是在这种做法中,照片描绘了一个现实,这种做法对“非人类机构”和时间流逝的纠缠持开放态度,并鼓励这种纠缠;记忆如何存在于我们的脑海中并被带回意识的现实。
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来源期刊
Photographies
Photographies Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
25
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