Australian photographer and film maker Frank Hurley became an
international celebrity through his reporting of the Mawson and
Shackleton Antarctic Expeditions, the First and Second World Wars,
the England-Australia air race of 1919, and his own expeditions to
Papua in the 1920s. This book is an account of his stage and screen
practice in the context of early twentieth-century mass media.
'Photography, Early Cinema and Colonial Modernity' is not a
biography of Frank Hurley the man; it is instead an examination of
the social life of the many marvellous and meaningful things he
made as a professional photographer and film maker in the early
twentieth century: the negatives, photographic prints, lantern
slides, stereographs, films, diaries and newspaper articles. His
stage and screen practices offer an insight into Australia's
engagement with the romance and wonder of international modernity
in the early years of the twentieth century. The level of
description at which this volume works is not that of personality
or the originary events of Hurley's life - the Mawson and
Shackleton Antarctic Expeditions, and the First and Second World
Wars - but the media events he worked so hard and so professionally
to create. He called them his 'synchronized lecture
entertainments'.
These media events were at once national and international; they
involved Hurley in an entire culture industry comprising many kinds
of personnel, practices and texts that were constantly in movement
along global lines of travel and communication, and in a variety of
institutional locations around the world. This raises complex
questions both about the authorship of Hurley's photographic and
filmic texts - which were often produced and presented by other
people - and about their ontology, since they were in a more or
less constant state of re-assemblage in response to changing market
opportunities. This unique study re-imagines, from inside the quiet
and stillness of the archive, the prior social life of Hurley's
creations as they were once accelerated through the complicated
topography of the early twentieth century's rapidly
internationalizing mass media landscape. As a way to conceive of
that space and the social life of the people and things within it,
this study uses the concept of 'colonial modernity'.
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