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On Photography

Author: Susan Sontag
Publisher: Delta
Category: Book

List Price: $3.95
Buy Used: $1.44
You Save: $2.51 (64%)



Used (8) Collectible (1) from $1.44

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 30 reviews
Sales Rank: 3298339

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 207

ISBN: 0385287577
EAN: 9780385287579
ASIN: 0385287577

Publication Date: September 15, 1978
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Very clean and tight Trade PB edition with ownership signature on front endpaper and no other markings of any kind. Small closed tear to rear cover.

Also Available In:

  • Unknown Binding - On photography
  • Paperback - On Photography
  • Paperback - On Photography
  • Paperback - On Photography (Penguin Modern Classics)
  • Paperback - On Photography
  • Hardcover - On Photography
  • Kindle Edition - On Photography
  • Paperback - On Photography
  • Paperback - On Photography
  • Unknown Binding - On photography

Similar Items:

  • Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography
  • Regarding the Pain of Others
  • Against Interpretation: And Other Essays
  • Ways of Seeing: Based on the BBC Television Series
  • Classic Essays on Photography

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Winner of the National Book Critics' Circle Award for Criticism (1977), this is "a brilliant analysis of the profound changes photographic images have made in our way of looking of the world and ourselves over the lost 140 years."-Washington PostBOOK WORLD


Customer Reviews:   Read 25 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Sontag   November 13, 2008
Sontag

noesis between
a critique of bias accompaniment
modernity into seventies intellect
you all in a thought
prescribed reasoning from
a photographer's reference
she and Arbus
grotesque "single village"
absurd family arranged encumbered
a transparent place
twins are girls
women and dwarves
she conjures Sylvia and Jong
each line cast
another memorial made


bordered thoughts in earnest
image as object
a search
"timeless beauty"
the notion of
character study--history
its colleagues fantastic
wealth and Weston
the modern lover
understands what is new then
she and hisher newness
evidential master's pieces decay
something edible
hidden apparent
tangible counterparts
decisive like Bresson
ghostly layers of Nadar


she collects evokes
collecting the world
Genet and his criminals
possessing their pasts for
posits--her
translations and debut
help from Proust quoted friends
never met or maybe now in death
regarded as part
cannon of thinkers
makers in need included
heroes and heroines
"an ethics in seeing"
a cave of truths
she is evident
in explanation replenished
possessing past to a
defining present



5 out of 5 stars Easy to criticize this book now, but it was the progenitor of the criticism of photography.   November 4, 2008
These essays helped the scholarship of photography get a fair shake. Even the publication of them in a book was a noteworthy entry in the history of photography. It is easy to look back now and criticize this book, which is basically an intellectual discipline in its infancy, but it remains important. I actually still enjoy the writing, which I find warm and inviting - not because of the tone, but because of the author's sense of adventure. It might be closer to a flight of fancy than a disciplined philosophy, but you have to start somewhere. I still think this is one of the best, most accessible reads on the subject.


1 out of 5 stars ill-Timed and Irrelevant   October 28, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I originally purchased this book based on the extraordinary, glowing reviews - you know, the same ones on the back cover: "book of great importance and originality", "the most original and illuminating study of the subject", "raises important and exciting questions" etc. etc. etc.

Since buying it, I've attempted to plow through it at least 4-5 times, managing to get about 3/4ths through. And I LIKE philosophy and alternative thinking! The problem I think, is that much of what Sontag writes about photography is simply wrong. That leaves out what is self-contradictory, such as saying (as I would characterize it) in one place that modern and documentary photography is manipulative and exploitive, while elsewhere saying it is meaningless (at one point saying a photo of a dwarf is, after all, just a dwarf).

Photography as an art form - even without considering digital photography and up-to-date image manipulation and creation - is, like any art form, foremost about point of view. That's a commonplace notion that taught in photography texts and mentioned in countless art books. Sontag starts with this and points some of them out - the idealism of early photographers imitating painterly scenes, for example.

No problem so far. Where Sontag strays, however, is in assigning personal, cultural, and political motive to the points of view taken, and casting them in the worst possible light. So in her view the photographer becomes "aggrandized" as a "self-expressing ego", his work (put in the most over-wrought fashion) "a heroic copulation with the material world"! She even goes after the motives of snapshooting tourists, characterizing picture-taking as an anxiety-driven imitation of work! This sort of blue-in-the-face prose reminds me of nothing so much as conspiracy theorist and expose writing.

The book was ill-timed because it came just as the world was diving full-on into the internet, in the process transforming photography again. All of a sudden, photos, videos, graphics, and derivative and creative versions of them are embedded into everything we do, at every level of art and expertise, from every direction, and seemingly from everyone. In this world, the oppressive and heavy-handed motives Sontag ascribes to photographers and those who use images in evil ways are swept into irrelevance. It's not that such things don't exist - witness the controversy over the Time magazine cover shot of O.J. Simpson, as a small example - it's that when incidents like this are one among millions or billions in a world where people create their own connections, communications, and communities, and the old mainstream press and book publishing world has lost its position in the world, much of what she argues ceases to have importance even if you accept it.

My recommendation is to pass On Photography by. Chances are you won't get through it anyway.



5 out of 5 stars On Photography   October 24, 2008
On Photography by Susan Sontag. Arrived within time. Is in great condition. And I'm delighted once again with the service. I cannot fault any aspect of it. So 99% and thanks.


5 out of 5 stars a must buy book on photography   August 26, 2008
if you have a serious interest on photography, this book is a must buy. It keep pushing you on considering the meaning of taking a pic, the relationship between the real world and photography, and many other perspectives related to photography. It provide large amount of examples to support its views. I truly think this book is a bible for every photographer. Even if we enter the digital era of photography, the content of this book isn't out of date and have precious value.
Regard to the fact that there is no picture in the whole book, I think that is a right choice. Any presented pictures will limit the universality of discussion, rather than realize it.
Overall, I give five star for this remarkable, historic book.



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