柯达胶卷种植园:布鲁斯·杰克逊的彩色监狱照片

IF 0.2 4区 艺术学 N/A ART
K. Schreiber
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文研究了布鲁斯·杰克逊在1964年至1979年间在德克萨斯州和阿肯色州的监狱农场拍摄的彩色照片。它不仅询问了为什么杰克逊的照片只以黑白出版和展出,而且还探讨了从监狱农场的彩色中可能获得的收获。从Sally Stein在两次世界大战之间的背景下对单色和多色摄影的修辞意义的研究延伸,本文认为,由于农场安全管理局摄影在20世纪60年代及其后的公共生活中广泛流通,黑白纪录片获得了新的历史真实性。由于它们与大萧条时期的手工、农业劳动照片有明显的共鸣,杰克逊的照片被榨干了色彩,以便将这个机构取代到遥远的过去。这篇文章声称,通过对监狱农场进行时间和时间的编码,杰克逊的彩色照片颠覆了我们看待监狱农场的方式,并在这样做的过程中,产生了20世纪60年代及之后的另一种历史——一种充分关注奴隶制及其余世的持续时间性的历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Kodachrome Plantation: Bruce Jackson’s Color Prison Photographs
Abstract This article examines the color photographs that were taken by Bruce Jackson at prison farms throughout Texas and Arkansas between 1964 and 1979. It not only asks why Jackson’s photographs have been exclusively published and exhibited in black-and-white, but also explores what might be gained by seeing the prison farm in color. Extending from Sally Stein’s examination of the rhetorical meanings of monochrome and polychrome photography in the interwar context, this article argues that, due to the widespread recirculation of Farm Security Administration photography in public life during the 1960s and after, black-and-white documentary gained a newfound historical authenticity. As a result of their clear resonance with Depression-era photographs of manual, agricultural labor, Jackson’s photographs were drained of color in order to displace the institution onto a remote past. This article claims that, by coding the prison farm as both in and out of time, Jackson’s color photographs upend the way in which we have been made to see the prison farm and, in doing so, produce an alternative history of the 1960s and after––one that fully attends to the ongoing temporality of slavery and its afterlives.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
33.30%
发文量
22
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