![]() ![]() The contemporary obsession with photography turns the public into ‘tourists and voyeurists’, with implications for both our private and public lives. ![]() Sontag deals with the dual nature of photography: as both a predatory attempt to appropriate another person’s reality and as a position of conspicuous non-interference as the person who documents the event is ultimately unable to influence its outcome. Photography is surreal by nature, and this surrealism is manifested in its very attempt to create a duplicate of the world a reality of the ‘second degree’, which, whilst limited, is even more striking. ![]() ![]() Sontag questions the flawed perception of this medium as an objective means of capturing experience: citing that a photographer’s work ‘gives rise to the same, often dark, deals between truth and art’, as painting or literature. In this collection of essays, Sontag deconstructs the stereotypes of photography – embedded within ordinary consciousness – and redefines the relationship between photography, reality, history and time. This famous collection of essays by Susan Sontag contemplates photography and its position in contemporary culture. ![]()
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