I believe in faking: The Dilemma of Photographic Realism at the Dawn of Photojournalism

Discussion in 'Photo eBooks' started by Kount, 17 Jun 2020.

  1. Kount

    Kount Silver III

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    by Andie Tucher

    This is an interesting academic paper. Take a look at the abstract and decide if it is your kind of reading.

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17514517.2017.1322397

    From about 1885 to 1910, the concept of the “fake” was an integral part of an ongoing debate in the USA over how best to represent reality for a mass journalistic audience. Nothing like the nefarious fraud its name might suggest, the term generally referred to the modest embellishment, invention, or correction of details in a story or a photograph to make it seem more vivid and truer to life. In both the newspaper press and the world of photography, some practitioners initially embraced the tactic as both useful for the practitioner and beneficial to the public. After the growing condemnation of the fake in the newspaper world helped to cement the increasing dominance of the professionalized journalist, in photography a vigorous debate carried out in the trade and popular press over the propriety and consequences of manipulating images helped to mark the boundaries of the emerging profession of photojournalism. The debate resonates to this day.

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    Last edited: 17 Jun 2020
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