From privacy concerns regarding Google Street View to surveillance photography’s association with terrorism and sexual predators, photography as an art has become complex terrain upon which anxieties about public space have been played out. Yet the photographic threat is not limited to the image alone. A range of social, technological and political issues converge in these rising anxieties and affect the practice, circulation, and consumption of contemporary public photography today. The Culture of Photography in Public Space collects essays and photographs that offer a new response to these restrictions, the events and the anxieties that give rise to them.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Introduction – Melissa Miles
Chapter 1
Standing on Shifting Ground: Privacy and Photography in Public – Melissa Miles
Chapter 2
Tilt – Simon Terrill
Chapter 3
‘No Credible Photographic Interest’: Photography Restrictions and Surveillance in a Time of Terror – Daniel Palmer and Jessica Whyte
Chapter 4
Street View/Interface – Michael Wolf
Chapter 5
Bill Henson and the Polemics of the Nude Child in Photography – Alexandra Heller-Nicholas and Anne Marsh
Chapter 6
The Sleepers and Trafalgar Square – Cherine Fahd
Chapter 7
Criminalizing ‘Camera Fiends’: Photography Restrictions in the Age of Digital Reproduction – Jessica Whyte
Chapter 8
In the Event of Amnesia the City will Recall – Denis Beaubois
Chapter 9
The Face in Digital Space – Martyn Jolly
Chapter 10
From Sixteen Google Street Views – Jon Rafman
Chapter 11
Google Street View and Photography in Public Space – Daniel Palmer
Further Reading
Sobre o autor
Daniel Palmer is associate dean of Research and Innovation in the School of Art at RMIT University. His book publications include Photography and Collaboration: From Conceptual Art to Crowdsourcing (Bloomsbury, 2017); Digital Light (Open Humanities Press, 2015), edited with Sean Cubitt and Nathaniel Tkacz; and The Culture of Photography in Public Space (Intellect, 2015), edited with Anne Marsh and Melissa Miles.
Contact: School of Art, RMIT University, Building 24, Level 2, Room 1A, 124 La Trobe Street, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia.