Empire of Ruins: American Culture, Photography, and the Spectacle of Destruction
Autor Miles Orvellen Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 mar 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190491604
ISBN-10: 0190491604
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 80 color illustrations
Dimensiuni: 175 x 257 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.78 kg
Editura: OUP USAOUP USA
Colecția OUP USAOUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190491604
Pagini: 280
Ilustrații: 80 color illustrations
Dimensiuni: 175 x 257 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.78 kg
Editura: OUP USAOUP USA
Colecția OUP USAOUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
In this fascinating, wide-ranging examination of how photography constructs cultural meaning, Orvell reveals his intrigue with photography's ability to represent both the promise ruins once held and the demise that faces humans and the finality of death ... Including a strong scholarly apparatus, this book is a must read for the archaeologist and climate activist as well as students of photography.
Orvell's fascination with how things acquire symbolic meaning continues with his self-proclaimed obsession with looking at ruins through photographs. In this fascinating, wide-ranging examination of how photography constructs cultural meaning, Orvell reveals his intrigue with photography's ability to represent both the promise ruins once held and the demise that faces humans and the finality of death. Orvell constructs an unconventional time line that begins with romantic, utopistic depictions of ruins built on photographs and paintings of the 19th century and moves into modernity and the present...with...photographs of ruins caused by climate change. Building a quiet, compelling undercurrent of images, Orvell argues that these photographs have become not just pictures of present-day ruins but clear-eyed images of the future....This book is a must read for the archaeologist and climate activist as well as students of photography. Highly recommended.
A superb cultural historian of modernity and photographic representation, Miles Orvell has produced the definitive survey of depictions and interpretations of destruction and ruin from the nineteenth century to the present. The author proposes three successive modes of viewing ruins—from romantic meditations on the distant past, to the modern era's fascination with continuous demolition and renewal, to our current obsession with future destruction. Flawlessly argued, elegantly written, and illustrated with compellingly selected photographs, Empire of Ruins brings together an eclectic array of sources for interrogating the past and future of American empire.
In his latest book, the ever-readable cultural historian Miles Orvell examines a broad range of writers, painters, filmmakers, and photographers who have depicted ruins, both real and imaginary, as a means of fathoming the nature of recurring social crises. Orvell helps us see how decaying cities, abandoned factories, and polluted natural resources have historically been accepted by our leaders as the cost of doing business. This provocative analysis by one of America's finest practitioners of urban, cultural, and photographic studies reconsiders a once-vital topic that has itself fallen into ruins. His book restores the topic to its rightful place as our institutions and environment alike face the threat of irreversible decline.
Ruins—from the decay of inner cities to natural and unnatural disasters—are an inescapable fact of American life. This very fine book tackles a fascinating topic, covering a broad span of time in an admirably concise and compelling way. The main focus is on the built environment in the United States, from buildings to entire cities. No other book considers photography, ruin, and American culture so broadly.
Orvell here proposes a genre—ruin photography—with its own aesthetics and morality, and persuasively argues that camera pictures of ruins in America have made us conscious of time in a particular way. He demonstrates how contemplating our own ruination might be just what we need right now.
Empire of Ruins is about image-making; about ruins as motifs for various kinds of specialist or popular media...Orvell's book arrives at a moment when understanding the history, the lure, and the critical potential of ruin images will most certainly not become less urgent.
Orvell's fascination with how things acquire symbolic meaning continues with his self-proclaimed obsession with looking at ruins through photographs. In this fascinating, wide-ranging examination of how photography constructs cultural meaning, Orvell reveals his intrigue with photography's ability to represent both the promise ruins once held and the demise that faces humans and the finality of death. Orvell constructs an unconventional time line that begins with romantic, utopistic depictions of ruins built on photographs and paintings of the 19th century and moves into modernity and the present...with...photographs of ruins caused by climate change. Building a quiet, compelling undercurrent of images, Orvell argues that these photographs have become not just pictures of present-day ruins but clear-eyed images of the future....This book is a must read for the archaeologist and climate activist as well as students of photography. Highly recommended.
A superb cultural historian of modernity and photographic representation, Miles Orvell has produced the definitive survey of depictions and interpretations of destruction and ruin from the nineteenth century to the present. The author proposes three successive modes of viewing ruins—from romantic meditations on the distant past, to the modern era's fascination with continuous demolition and renewal, to our current obsession with future destruction. Flawlessly argued, elegantly written, and illustrated with compellingly selected photographs, Empire of Ruins brings together an eclectic array of sources for interrogating the past and future of American empire.
In his latest book, the ever-readable cultural historian Miles Orvell examines a broad range of writers, painters, filmmakers, and photographers who have depicted ruins, both real and imaginary, as a means of fathoming the nature of recurring social crises. Orvell helps us see how decaying cities, abandoned factories, and polluted natural resources have historically been accepted by our leaders as the cost of doing business. This provocative analysis by one of America's finest practitioners of urban, cultural, and photographic studies reconsiders a once-vital topic that has itself fallen into ruins. His book restores the topic to its rightful place as our institutions and environment alike face the threat of irreversible decline.
Ruins—from the decay of inner cities to natural and unnatural disasters—are an inescapable fact of American life. This very fine book tackles a fascinating topic, covering a broad span of time in an admirably concise and compelling way. The main focus is on the built environment in the United States, from buildings to entire cities. No other book considers photography, ruin, and American culture so broadly.
Orvell here proposes a genre—ruin photography—with its own aesthetics and morality, and persuasively argues that camera pictures of ruins in America have made us conscious of time in a particular way. He demonstrates how contemplating our own ruination might be just what we need right now.
Empire of Ruins is about image-making; about ruins as motifs for various kinds of specialist or popular media...Orvell's book arrives at a moment when understanding the history, the lure, and the critical potential of ruin images will most certainly not become less urgent.
Notă biografică
Miles Orvell is Professor of English and American Studies at Temple University. He is the author of The Real Thing: Imitation and Authenticity in American Culture, 1880-1940, American Photography (OUP, 2003), and The Death and Life of Main Street: Small Towns in American Memory, Space, and Community. Orvell received the Bode-Pearson Prize for lifetime achievement from the American Studies Association.