Feeling Photography Edited by Elspeth H. Brown and Thy Phu
Feeling Photography Edited by Elspeth H. Brown and Thy Phu
Feeling Photography Edited by Elspeth H. Brown and Thy Phu
Photography
elspeth h. brown and thy phu
Feeling
Photography
Feeling
Photography
E l s p e t h H . B r o w n a n d T h y P h u, e d i t o r s
Acknowledgments / vii
Introduction / 1
Elspeth H. Brown and Thy Phu
PART I. Touchy-Feely
1
Photography between Desire and Grief: Roland Barthes
and F. Holland Day / 29
Shawn Michelle Smith
2
Making Sexuality Sensible: Tammy Rae Carland’s and
Catherine Opie’s Queer Aesthetic Forms / 47
Dana Seitler
3
Sepia Mutiny: Colonial Photography and Its Others
in India / 71
Christopher Pinney
4
Skin, Flesh, and the Affective Wrinkles of
Civil Rights Photography / 93
Elizabeth Abel
7
Regarding the Pain of the Other: Photography, Famine,
and the Transference of Affect / 181
Kimberly Juanita Brown
8
Accessible Feelings, Modern Looks: Irene Castle,
Ira L. Hill, and Broadway’s Affective Economy / 204
Marlis Schweitzer
12
Topographies of Feeling: On Catherine Opie’s
American Football Landscapes / 297
Lisa Cartwright
13
The Feeling of Photography, the Feeling
of Kinship / 325
David L. Eng
Epilogue / 349
Thy Phu and Elspeth H. Brown
Bibliography / 357
Contributors / 385
Index / 389
Acknowledgments
When we first began this project, we were not exactly sure how we
felt about feeling photography, only that the questions we were framing
were worth asking. We explored these questions over the course of lunches
and dinners in spirited conversations with members of the Toronto Pho-
tography Seminar, who patiently guided us through the emotional spec-
trum from puzzlement to excitement, and who helped us realize that feel-
ing was a powerful analytic for thinking about photography. Our deepest
thanks go to our dear friends and colleagues, members of this research col-
lective, who have been such an inspiring force behind this project: Sarah
Bassnett, Marta Braun, Matthew Brower, Deepali Dewan, Sophie Hackett,
Laura Levin, Sarah Parsons, Sharon Sliwinski, Linda Steer, Dot Tuer, Kelly
Wood, and Carol Zemel. We’re especially grateful to Sarah Parsons, whose
graciousness and generosity nourished us through theoretical impasses,
rhetorical fisticuffs, and conceptual breakthroughs. Many thanks as well
to research assistants David Sworn, Jonathan Fardy, Shyama Talukdar, and
especially Daniel Guadagnolo for their tireless work in research and manu-
script preparation.
We’d like to acknowledge the support of the Social Sciences and Humani-
ties Council of Canada, the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at Western Uni-
versity, and the Centre for the Study of the United States at the Univer-
sity of Toronto for their extensive research support. We’re also grateful to
Ken Wissoker and Jade Brooks for their guidance and encouragement. Our
anonymous readers at Duke made brilliant, clairvoyant suggestions that
have helped make this project become itself more fully: many thanks for
your care, attention, and collegiality.
Finally, we thank our families—Art, Asa, and Michael—you know who
you are, what you mean to us, and, of course, how we feel about you.
Chapter 4 is reprinted from Qui Parle with permission from the Uni-
versity of Nebraska Press. Elizabeth Abel, “Skin, Flesh, and the Affective
Wrinkles of Civil Rights Photography,” Qui Parle 20.2 (2012): 35–69.
A much earlier version of chapter 9 appeared as Diana Taylor, “Trauma
as Durational Performance,” in Rites of Return: Diaspora Poetics and the Poli-
tics of Memory, edited by Marianne Hirsch and Nancy Miller, 268–280. New
York: Columbia University Press, 2011.
A much earlier version of chapter 10 appeared as “Das Nachleben der
Schulfotos” (trans. Susanne Knittel), in Sehen—Macht—Wissen: ReSaVoir.
Bilder im Spannungsfeld von Kultur, Politik und Erinnerung, edited by Angelika
Bartl, Josch Hoenes, Patricia Mühr, and Kea Wienand, 99–115. Bielefeld:
Transcript, 2011.
A much earlier version of chapter 11 appeared as Ann Cvetkovich,
“Photographing Objects: Art as Queer Archival Practice,” in Lost and Found:
Queerying the Archive, edited by Mathias Danbolt, Jane Rowley, and Louise
Wolthers. Nikolaj: Copenhagen Contemporary Art Center, 2009.
A much earlier version of chapter 13 appeared as “The Feeling of Kinship:
Affect and Language in History and Memory,” in David L. Eng, The Feeling
of Kinship: Queer Liberalism and the Racialization of Intimacy, 166–198. Dur-
ham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010.
viii Acknowledgments
Feeling
Photography
Jacob Riis, Street Arabs in “Sleeping Quarters,” 1890.
Image courtesy of Library of Congress.
Introduction
ELSPETH H. BROWN AND THY PHU
Introduction 3
and feeling and drew instead upon the critical tools of neo-Marxist histori-
cal materialism, discourse analysis, and psychoanalytic theory to establish a
still influential account of the camera as a technology of surveillance, a dis-
cursive site, and an ideological apparatus where meanings are constructed
through the circulation of photography. The expansive embrace of new criti-
cal models and historiographies that has since emerged has yet to engage
fully with the theoretical seismic shift that Patricia Ticineto Clough has
called the “affective turn.”11
Given the marginalization of feminist, queer, and racialized perspec-
tives within the 1970s and 1980s “thinking” rubric, it is perhaps no sur-
prise that an alternative approach attentive to the affinity between feeling
and photography is offered by feminist critic Susan Sontag, whose land-
mark book emerged at the same time that materialist approaches to pho-
tography studies first gained traction. Sontag wrote eloquently about mel-
ancholia, among other feelings, in On Photography (a book that Barthes
significantly acknowledges as an influence), and continued to explore the
relationship between moral feeling and ethical response in her last book,
Regarding the Pain of Others.12 While feeling permeated Sontag’s writings
about photography, she unexpectedly shared with the thinking approach
a palpable suspicion about feeling, which for her is a problem not because
of its unimportance in the construction of photographic meaning. Rather,
in overdetermining meaning, insofar as we may feel too much, feeling is
worrisome for Sontag because it may paralyze ethical action.13 The signifi-
cance of the relationship between moral feeling and ethical action remains,
however, an abiding concern in photo criticism, especially among scholars
such as Ariella Azoulay, who are concerned with establishing an ethics of
spectatorship that “shed terms such as ‘empathy,’ ‘shame,’ ‘pity,’ or ‘compas-
sion’ as organizers of . . . [the civic] gaze,”14 and more recently Sharon Sli-
winski, who likewise contends that feeling binds spectators into an ethical
community.15 The rejection of these terms in analyses of atrocity images
in particular speaks not to a rejection of feeling altogether but rather to a
desire to provoke more politically useful feelings.
Just as importantly, the straightness of the thinking approach is all the
more striking when contrasted against Barthes’s decidedly queer account
of feeling photography. As Kris Cohen and Carol Mavor perceptively put it,
feeling for Barthes was intensely queer.16 Reading Barthes’s moving reflec-
tions on photography attuned to the sensuous dimensions of his phenome-
nology helps disclose with jarring literalism the sexually loaded charge of
Introduction 5
exciting new developments in the fields of affect theory and photo criticism,
Feeling Photography shifts the critical focus from thinking photography to a
broad range of analytic approaches shaped by the affective turn.
Introduction 7
questions concerning racial formation, colonialism, postindustrial econo-
mies, gender, and queer counterpublics.
Third, though this question presupposes that feeling is a new analytic
approach, it has long been central to the history and theory of photography,
in both the production and viewing of images. Conversely, photography
has also inspired affect theorists. Not only are a number of the contribu-
tors to this volume influential scholars in affect studies, who turn specifi-
cally to analysis of photography here for the first time, but photography has
also long played an important role in affect theory. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
memorably acknowledged how a photo so moved her that she was inspired
to theorize the connection between touching and feeling. Indeed, as our
brief survey of Duchenne and Darwin below shows, photography’s promi-
nence in debates about feeling is evident from the inception of this field
of inquiry. Attention to feeling in the long history of photography—a his-
tory that intersects provocatively with the history of affect studies—brings
new questions to topics long sidelined due to modernism’s antipathy toward
emotion (nineteenth-century combination printing, à la Oscar Rejlander, is
one such example).
Because feeling has been key to the production of photography itself, this
volume investigates this concept as modernism’s other. A focus on feeling,
in other words, represents a welcome queering of modernism’s normative
tendencies. Indeed, by bringing the insights afforded by the affective turn
to photography, we hope to inspire a new account of the medium’s discur-
sive history. And while it is beyond the scope of this introduction to provide
such an account in full, a brief overview of several important developments
in this history—expression of emotions in photography, Pictorialism, and
moral reform—demonstrates not only feeling’s profound influence in shap-
ing these developments but also the insights afforded by this approach.
Introduction 9
sought to elevate photography as a distinct art by emulating painting.) Three
decades later, however, a brief return to Pictorialism’s primary sources sug-
gests a rich terrain for a historical investigation of the relationship between
feeling and photography; indeed, the contemporary debates are predicated
on the role of feelings in the production of photographic images.
As photographers began making greater aesthetic claims for their images
in the mid- to late nineteenth century, conservative critics lambasted these
efforts through an argument based upon the camera’s inability to capture
the operator/would-be artist’s feelings. Art, the argument developed, is “not
due to knowledge, but to feeling,” as the English art critic Phillip Gilbert
Hamerton summarized in 1887. To make the viewer “love the work,” Hamer-
ton continued, “an artist must win our sympathy with his feeling.”28 The
sentiment of a picture, concurred American art critic W. J. Stillman in the
same period, resides not in the image but in the artist, whose skills “awaken
in us, by some association, a certain feeling which underlies the impression
made on the sense, and which we call sentiment.”29
As those familiar with the history of art photography know, it was the
camera’s indiscriminate recording of all detail, the seeming incapacity of
the operator to select one detail over another, which rendered the photo-
graph outside the boundaries of art. In this view, the camera’s “slavish imi-
tation of nature” occludes the central role of the artist in making and com-
municating aesthetic judgments; as a result, to continue with Stillman’s
polemic, “a photographic view can have neither sentiment nor expres-
sion.”30 The outlook was no more sanguine for the portrait. Whereas the
portrait painter can catch the sitter’s flitting emotion and still retain it in
memory in order to reproduce it faithfully, the camera’s inability to capture
such fleeting moments in an era of wet-plate photography meant that all
photographic portraits were necessarily caricatures of the sitter’s emotional
life. As Hamerton argued, “photography is a purely scientific and unfeeling
art”—in other words, not art at all.31
If art depended on communicating the artist’s feelings, and if the method
was an artful selection of materials and detail, then not surprisingly art pho-
tography’s advocates focused their defense on the photography student’s re-
lationship to emotions. Edwin Cocking, writing in the British Journal of Pho-
tography in 1878, argued that photography students would do well to learn
from the artist’s emphasis on feeling. Two years later in the same journal,
W. Neilson outlined ten principles of aesthetic composition for photogra-
phers, so that they might achieve the “high aim” of all art: “to set forth what
will elevate and expand our emotional being.”32
Introduction 11
series of nighttime photographic raids of saloons, tenements, police lodging
houses, and opium dens; these images, reproduced in lantern slide lectures
and line drawings in the late 1880s, helped tie photographic technologies
to a discourse of social scientific “fact,” providing visual testimony of the
squalid conditions in New York’s Lower East Side slums.35
At the same time, however, as a young crime reporter for the New York
Tribune, Riis quickly discovered the centrality of feeling to narrative tension
in his reporting. As he wrote in his autobiography, “the fact is that it is all
a great human drama . . . grief, suffering, revenge upon somebody, loss or
gain. The reporter who is behind the scenes sees the tumult of passions.”36
For Riis, there was no contradiction between feeling and the era’s demand
for “facts.” A brief visit with any of Riis’s voluminous writings, including
later works such as Children of the Poor (1892), or The Peril and Preserva-
tion of the Home (1903), provides ample evidence of narrative strategies de-
signed to produce specific feelings within the implied middle-class reader.
Working within an older tradition of sentimental literature that relied on
discourses of “sunlight and shadow” to showcase the mysteries and mis-
eries of modern urban life, Riis catered to both sensational and moralistic
sensibilities.37 Notably, an iconic photograph included in How the Other Half
Lives, titled Street Arabs in “Sleeping Quarters,” tries to capture the dejection
of poverty which for him was most keenly felt on the faces of these street
urchins—who in turn could effectively arouse pity, necessary to generate
support for the cause of reform. What this photograph also discloses is the
production of sympathetic feeling, whose facticity is belied by the barely
suppressed smiles of the posed children. Humor lies alongside Riis’s picture
of sorrow and misery.
Yet despite Riis’s emotion-laden narrative strategies, the secondary lit-
erature ignores the affective dimensions of his work in favor of an empha-
sis on the “social fact”—disregarding the thorough imbrication of these
approaches for contemporary social reformers. A turn to “feeling,” how-
ever, provokes a new understanding of these texts’ historical meaning. Riis
sought not necessarily the simple manifestation of feeling, but also a trans-
formation of broad states of being among his viewers: his goal was an af-
fective transformation in the middle class, one that would lead to improved
social conditions for New York’s poor. Following Silvan Tomkins’s work on
the contagious nature of some affects, where affect works in a circuit of feel-
ing and response, we might think about Riis’s work as centrally concerned
with the production and circulation of feeling designed to produce an activ-
ist viewer, one whose disgust at the “dirty stains” of immigrant life become
TOUCHY-F EELY
As Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick reminds us, “a particular intimacy seems to sub-
sist between textures and emotions.” This dual meaning of feeling as the
“tactile plus emotional” is one of the many resonances we hope to mark by
titling our volume Feeling Photography.38 As numerous practitioners, critics,
and collectors would agree, photography is fundamentally tactile. Touch-
Introduction 13
ing photographs, whether it is the glossy surface of a developed print itself
or even the protective frame that might enclose this print, is one of our
most compelling engagements with the medium, particularly since this act
is often accompanied by the sensation that the subjects pictured on this sur-
face can somehow touch back.39 Not even scholars, who might be tempted
to imagine themselves protected by the cloak of critical distance, can always
remain unaffected by this confluence of feeling, Carol Mavor observes, for
surely this distance is overcome when at last gloved hands touch their object
of study.40 Given this concern, it is little wonder that, in addition to ruminat-
ing on the ontology of photography, critics concerned with the meanings of
photography have also repeatedly reflected upon its phenomenology.41 Not
surprisingly, the haptic register of photography—what it might mean to feel
photographs and how photographs might, in turn, feel—has, alongside its
optic register, long preoccupied photo critics. The chapters in this part con-
tribute to this thread of inquiry by exploring this duality of feeling, touch,
and affect. In “Photography between Desire and Grief: Roland Barthes and
F. Holland Day,” Shawn Michelle Smith explores the ways that this duality
unfolds within the theory of feeling in photography that Barthes introduces
in Camera Lucida. Central for Barthes are desire and grief, feelings constitu-
tive of a queer sensibility that in turn permeate the photographs of the Pic-
torialist F. Holland Day. Juxtaposing these works, Smith reveals how desire
and grief help construct perverse modernities.
Emphasis on feeling in photography served many ends, most notably to
draw an analogy between the medium and art and to attest to the truth
believed to be depicted within images. And yet approaches to the haptic
sometimes consider feeling solely in terms of tactility, with little direct con-
cern for its affective connotations. Referring to some of his earliest experi-
ments with photography, Henry Fox Talbot, for instance, introduced the
evocative phrase “the pencil of nature” to describe the chemical process
by which images are imprinted on paper. In so doing, he underscored the
medium’s materiality, its ability to record the referent’s trace, a concept that
would later be theorized, following the work of Charles Sanders Peirce, as
the index. A theme taken up by generations of critics, indexicality is an in-
fluential way of conceptualizing the tactile sense of feeling in photography.
Besides this concern with drawing parallels between art and photography,
indexicality, as a basis for an irrefutable (though increasingly disputed42)
connection between the referent and the represented image—so that the
former touches the latter—confirms photography’s evidential efficacy. In
Introduction 15
materialized intellectualism of abstract expressionist photography, in a
move that risks, Armstrong acknowledges, essentializing the feeling female
body as the basis of sexual difference in photography.
While this opposition between a feeling haptics and a detached optics
offers a powerful way of explaining the masculine intellectualism of, on the
one hand, twentieth-century modernism, and an affectively feminine and/
or queer countermodernism on the other hand, many decades later, toward
the end of the twentieth century, these divisions seem no longer so stark
when it comes to shaping sexuality. As Dana Seitler shows in her consider-
ation of contemporary queer aesthetics, varied styles of representation—
including abstract expressionism and even Renaissance portraiture—form
the art historical touchstones for the development of what she calls a “queer
sensibility.” Her essay, “Making Sexuality Sensible” (chapter 2), provides a
sensual exploration of texture in the works of Catherine Opie and Tammy
Rae Carland, and argues that the materiality evoked through techniques
such as historical citation helps conceptualize within photography a queer-
ing of affect.
Attending to the tactile resonances of feeling in photography discloses
another valence of the queer. As a challenge to Western modernity, the
painted photograph offers a layering of color upon the two-dimensional
surface of print to highlight tactility. Christopher Pinney’s essay, “Sepia
Mutiny: Colonial Photography and Its Others in India” (chapter 3), reveals
how painted photographs in India help to construct a “feeling community,”
subtly resistant to the spatial and temporal constraints of a Western moder-
nity.
How effectively can touch unsettle frequently durable divides? Taking
up questions that Mavor’s analysis raises by focusing on select civil rights
photographs widely circulated within the United States, Elizabeth Abel
considers how the surface of photography might alternately evoke the skin
and flesh of the subjects that they depict. In “Skin, Flesh, and the Affective
Wrinkles of Civil Rights Photography” (chapter 4), Abel reconsiders the af-
fective idealism ascribed to this set of images, revealing that, despite the
rhetorical power that this idealism evokes for the civil rights movement,
the entanglements evoked within the photographs themselves are far more
equivocal than commonly assumed.
As the basis for the intertwining of these two senses, tactility and affect,
feeling, then, is more than an index of the referent. While the language of
indexicality might occasionally echo in the chapters included in this sec-
tion, the concept itself often turns out to be inextricable from the emotions
Introduction 17
cluded from the domestic spheres, these marginalized subjects are never-
theless indispensable in shaping these spheres while continuing to haunt
them.
Three essays in this section explore the racialization of affect. In “Look-
ing Pleasant, Feeling White: The Social Politics of the Photographic Smile”
(chapter 5), Tanya Sheehan explores the production of feeling, demonstrat-
ing through her analysis of commercial portraits produced in the late nine-
teenth century by the Gallup studio in Poughkeepsie, New York, which de-
pict black subjects’ toothy smiles, that this work provides a pedagogy of
white normative emotional expression.
Whereas Sheehan considers the ways that the black body bears the bur-
den of excess feeling, Lily Cho examines the significance of the lack of af-
fect, a requirement for the representation of the Chinese Canadian body in
the early twentieth century. Her essay, “Anticipating Citizenship: Chinese
Head Tax Photographs” (chapter 6), argues that the photographs, which
were taken well before conventions of passport portraiture were confirmed,
in fact constitute a proleptic form of resistance, anticipating and thereby
symbolically challenging the state-sanctioned detachment of emotion from
citizenship. Kimberly Juanita Brown’s essay is also concerned with the re-
lationship between intimacy, affect, and empire. In her reading of Kevin
Carter’s Pulitzer Prize–winning photograph of a starving Sudanese girl
shadowed by a waiting vulture, Brown emphasizes the role of intimacy and
space in producing the affective displacements of more recent colonial re-
lations, one that unfolds in a space that is often all too public.
As these essays reveal, sentimental discourse’s claim to power consti-
tuted, in effect, a bridging of private spaces (the intimate preserve of the
home where women were traditionally confined) and public spaces (the
conventional site of politics). Marlis Schweitzer likewise explores the role
of intimacy and sentiment in soliciting feeling, not for the purposes of poli-
tics, but rather for the creation of modern celebrity. In her analysis of Ira L.
Hill’s photographs of early twentieth-century performer Irene Castle (chap-
ter 8), Schweitzer shows how the widespread circulation of Castle’s images
encouraged audiences to associate her with the affective qualities of female
modernity.
The essays within this section provide a fuller picture of the ways that
sentiment and intimacy are produced by photography, not merely captured
by the camera as a strand of expression studies would have it. These essays
rather demonstrate the uneven ways that feeling—whether its apparent
lack or manifest excess—are attributed to the faces of marginal subjects,
AFFECTIVE ARCHIVES
For photo historians working with the insights of Michel Foucault, the ar-
chive is a site of knowledge production rather than of knowledge retrieval,
in which photography serves a disciplinary function and photographic
meanings are discursively constructed through their institutional circu-
lation.50 Although this approach to the archive is, as we have shown, in-
sistently scientific and self-consciously “objective,” it remains important
because it offers a revelatory analysis of power, helping, for example, to ex-
plain how normative bodies are shaped through the construction of crimi-
nalized others. Though this structuralist analysis of power has been criti-
cally enabling, it has generally been less instructive, however, in providing
a full account of alterity.51 While Foucauldian scholars have tended to be
unconcerned with the affective qualities of the archive (recent work by Ann
Laura Stoler is an exception), current scholarship has explored the relation-
ship between archives, alterity, and affect.52
Perhaps the most illuminating contrast to the seemingly dispassionate
Foucauldian account of the archive is offered by Jacques Derrida, who, in
Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression, underscores its affective—its fever-
ish—qualities.53 The term “fever,” which Derrida uses interchangeably
with desire, denotes the archive’s central paradox, as at once the site where
knowledge is gathered and legitimated and yet where it is also destroyed.
Whereas discursive approaches to the archive have focused on presence and
memory, by contrast, affective approaches attend to the nuances of absence
and forgetting, precisely those qualities that would appear to scatter irrevo-
cably beyond the archive, but which Archive Fever insists is constitutive of it.
Diana Taylor and Ann Cvetkovich, two contributors to this section, have
elsewhere provided influential theories of the relationship between these
two seemingly irreconcilable concepts, the archive (a fixed repository) and
the ephemeral (that which cannot, by definition, be fixed), which is perhaps
most vulnerable to forgetting.54 In “Trauma in the Archive” (chapter 9),
Taylor reconsiders the challenge to official histories by focusing on perfor-
mances staged within the archive itself, specifically memorial enactments
at a site of atrocity tourism at Villa Grimaldi, a former torture and extermi-
nation camp on the outskirts of Santiago de Chile. Marianne Hirsh and Leo
Spitzer also consider the ways that personal feelings may powerfully rework
institutional framings of history. In “School Photos and Their Afterlives”
Introduction 19
(chapter 10), they explore the works of Christian Boltanski and Marcelo
Brodsky, both of whom draw upon the conventions of school photographs,
particularly their uniformity and seeming affectlessness, in order to chal-
lenge pedagogies of national citizenship.
Working from a slightly different theoretical approach, Ann Cvetkovich
expands the concept of the archive so that it can take account of feelings. In
her essay for this section, “Photographing Objects as Queer Archival Prac-
tice” (chapter 11), Cvetkovich turns to a consideration of photography as
an archive of queer feeling. In some ways, the chapter can be seen as a col-
laborative effort, for in addition to considering the works of Zoe Leonard’s
engagement with photography as an archiving practice, she focuses on the
work of Tammy Rae Carland, whose recent project, Archive of Feelings, was
directly inspired by Cvetkovich’s book. Cvetkovich queers the archive in
this piece by examining these artists’ documentation of ephemeral, idiosyn-
cratic objects of queer collections of embedded feelings.
Lisa Cartwright’s essay on Catherine Opie’s American football series
offers a perverse account of the queer that refuses to dwell on the queer sub-
cultural lives so often associated with Opie’s work (chapter 12). Cartwright
sees Opie’s football portraits and landscapes as “American topographies of
public feeling” that constitute an affective archive marked by a bland aes-
thetic, one that signifies the loss of a capacity for irony.
David Eng draws on the concepts of the repertoire and postmemory to
consider how affect is transmitted. His essay in this volume, “The Feeling
of Photography, the Feeling of Kinship” (chapter 13), explores how histori-
cal traumas of grief, loss, and forgetting are passed from one generation to
another, represented and reworked through Rea Tajiri’s “documentary of af-
fect.” The essays in this section provide ways of locating feeling within the
archive, either by decentering and thus challenging the institutional power
that would banish feeling, or by looking elsewhere to seemingly banal sites
where feeling and desires repressed within the archive may find vivid and
surprising expression.
This volume offers a snapshot of contemporary inquiries regarding the
relationship between the photographic image and affect, emotion, and feel-
ing. We hope each of the essays are read with a sense of the thematic coher-
ence that the sections seek to establish, as well as with the understanding
that this coherence may be impossible to achieve. That these essays are not
easily or neatly contained within these sections, that they sometimes attach
in uneven ways to particular photographers, is further sign of the perverse
NOTES
1. Roland Barthes, Camera Lucida (New York: Hill and Wang, 1981).
2. Barthes, Camera Lucida, 10.
3. A richer appreciation of the implications of this insight is evident in work that has
recently begun to unpack the book’s manifold influences, especially Photography
Degree Zero: Reflections on Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida (Cambridge, MA: mit
Press, 2009), the collection of essays edited by Geoffrey Batchen.
4. Victor Burgin, ed., Thinking Photography (London: Macmillan, 1982).
5. John Tagg, The Burden of Representation: Essays on Photographies and Histories (Am-
herst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1988), 3.
6. Victor Burgin, “Re-reading Camera Lucida,” in Batchen, Photography Degree Zero, 43.
7. Burgin, “Re-reading Camera Lucida.”
8. This aversion to feeling, with its materialist methodological allegiances, can, ac-
cording to Susie Linfield, be traced even earlier to the scholarly skepticism asso-
ciated with Weimar-era writers on photography, most notably Walter Benjamin and
Siegfried Kracauer. See Susie Linfield, The Cruel Radiance: Photography and Political
Violence (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011).
9. See Allan Sekula, Photography against the Grain: Essays and Photoworks, 1973–1983
(Halifax: Press of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, 1984). For scholarship
Introduction 21
committed to materialist analyses of photography, see also Rosalind Krauss, “Pho-
tography’s Discursive Spaces,” October 42 (1982): 311–319; and Richard Bolton, ed.,
The Contest of Meaning: Critical Histories of Photography (Cambridge, MA: mit Press,
1989). For John Tagg’s recent turn to melancholy as an approach to thinking photog-
raphy, see his essay “Melancholy Realism: Walker Evans’ Resistance to Meaning,” in
The Disciplinary Frame: Photographic Truths and the Capture of Meaning (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2008), 95–178.
10. Edward Welch and J. J. Long, “Introduction: A Small History of Photography
Studies,” in Photography: Theoretical Snapshots, ed. J. J. Long, Andrea Noble, and
Edward Welch (London: Routledge, 2009), 1.
11. Patricia Ticineto Clough, ed., The Affective Turn (Durham, NC: Duke University
Press, 2007).
12. Susan Sontag, Regarding the Pain of Others (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux,
2002).
13. Judith Butler reminds us that Sontag nevertheless valued critical narrative, or think-
ing, over feeling, despite acknowledging the latter’s political potential. See Judith
Butler, Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? (London: Verso, 2009).
14. Ariella Azoulay, The Civil Contract of Photography, trans. Rela Mazali and Ruvik
Danieli (New York: Zone Books, 2008), 17.
15. Sharon Sliwinski, Human Rights in Camera (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
2012).
16. Kris Cohen, “Locating the Photograph’s ‘Prick’: A Queer Tropology of Roland
Barthes’s Camera Lucida,” caj 6.1 (1996): 5–14. In “Roland Barthes’s Umbilical Refer-
ent,” Carol Mavor explores the queer coupling of mother and son in Camera Lucida.
See Carol Mavor, Reading Boyishly: Roland Barthes, J. M. Barrie, Jacques Henri Lar-
tigue, Marcel Proust, and D. W. Winnicott (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007).
17. Carol Mavor, “Black and Blue: The Shadows of Camera Lucida,” in Batchen, Photog-
raphy Degree Zero. See also Carol Mavor, “Love-Love, Ni-Ni: Roland Barthes and
Bernard Faucon, a Butterfly Effect,” Photography and Culture 4.11 (2011): 29–53;
Margaret Olin, “Touching Photographs: Barthes’s ‘Mistaken’ Identification,” Rep-
resentations 80 (2002): 99–118; Shawn Michelle Smith, “Race and Reproduction in
Camera Lucida,” in Batchen, Photography Degree Zero, 98–111.
18. With regard to physiology, see, for example, Brian Massumi, Parables for the Virtual:
Movement, Affect, Sensation (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002). The work
that has emerged within trauma studies has most rigorously approached affect from
this perspective. Perhaps the most influential criticism that takes account of pho-
tography is Marianne Hirsch, Family Frames: Photography, Narrative, and Postmemory
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1997).
19. Georges Didi-Huberman, Invention of Hysteria: Charcot and the Photographic Ico-
nography of the Salpêtrière, trans. Alisa Hartz (Cambridge, MA: mit Press, 2003);
Marianne Hirsch, “Surviving Images: Holocaust Photographs and the Work of Post-
memory,” in Visual Culture and the Holocaust, ed. Barbie Zelizer (New Brunswick,
NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2001), 215–246; Andrea Liss, Trespassing through Shad-
Introduction 23
32. Edwin Cocking, “Stray Thoughts on the Exhibition” and “On the Subjective and
Objective of Pictorial Photography,” British Journal of Photography (1878): 42, 606;
W. Neilson, “Principles or Rules of Pictorial Composition,” British Journal of Photog-
raphy (1880): 140–142.
33. Henry Peach Robinson, “Expression in Landscape,” in The Elements of a Pictorial
Photograph (1896; repr., New York: Arno, 1973), 62.
34. Bonnie Yochelson, Marianne Fulton, and Kathleen A. Irwin, Pictorialism into Mod-
ernism: The Clarence H. White School of Photography (New York: Rizzoli, 1996); Paul
Strand, “Photography and the New God” (1917), in Classic Essays on Photography, ed.
Alan Trachtenberg (New Haven, CT: Leete’s Island Books, 1980), 141–151.
35. Luc Sante, “Introduction,” in Jacob Riis, How the Other Half Lives (London: Pen-
guin, 1997); Maren Stange, Symbols of Ideal Life: Social Documentary Photography in
America, 1890–1950 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 1–46; Bonnie
Yochelson and Daniel Czitrom, Rediscovering Jacob Riis: Exposure Journalism and Pho-
tography in Turn-of-the-Century New York (New York: New Press, 2007).
36. Jacob Riis, The Making of an American (London: Macmillan, 1902), 204.
37. Angela M. Blake, How New York Became American, 1890–1924 (Baltimore, MD: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 2006); George G. Foster, New York by Gas-Light and Other
Urban Sketches, edited with an introduction by Stuart M. Blumin (Berkeley: Univer-
sity of California Press, 1990).
38. Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Touching Feeling: Affect, Pedagogy, Performativity (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 2003). On haptic visuality, see Laura Marks, The Skin of
the Film: Intercultural Cinema, Embodiment, and the Senses (Durham, NC: Duke Uni-
versity Press, 2000).
39. Margaret Olin, Touching Photographs (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2012).
40. Carol Mavor, Pleasures Taken: Performances of Sexuality and Loss in Victorian Photo-
graphs (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1995).
41. See, for example, Hubert Damisch, “Notes for a Phenomenology of the Photo-
graphic Image,” in Trachtenberg, ed., Classic Essays on Photography, 287–290.
42. See Margaret Olin, “Touching Photographs: Roland Barthes’s ‘Mistaken’ Identifica-
tion,” in Batchen, Photography Degree Zero, 75–90.
43. Marina Warner, Phantasmagoria: Spirit Visions, Metaphors, and Media into the Twenty-
First Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 290; see also Clément
Chéroux, The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult (New Haven, CT: Yale
University Press, 2005); Louis Kaplan, The Strange Case of William Mumler, Spirit
Photographer (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008).
44. Geoffrey Bachten, Forget Me Not: Photography and Remembrance (Amsterdam: Van
Gogh Museum, 2004).
45. Carol Armstrong, “This Photography Which Is Not One: In the Gray Zone with Tina
Modotti,” October 101 (summer 2002): 19–52.
46. Though the American sentimental novel was most prominent in the nineteenth
century, critics have persuasively shown its influence during the republican period
and in captivity narratives. See Julia Stern, The Plight of Feeling: Sympathy and Dis-
Introduction 25