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Photography was invented between the publication of Adam Smith's
The Wealth of Nations and Karl Marx and Frederick Engels's The
Communist Manifesto. Taking the intertwined development of
capitalism and the camera as their starting point, the essays in
Capitalism and the Camera investigate the relationship between
capitalist accumulation and the photographic image, and ask whether
photography might allow us to refuse capitalism's violence-and if
so, how? Drawn together in productive disagreement, the essays in
this collection explore the relationship of photography to resource
extraction and capital accumulation, from 1492 to the postcolonial;
the camera's potential to make visible critical understandings of
capitalist production and society, especially economies of class
and desire; and propose ways that the camera and the image can be
used to build cultural and political counterpublics from which a
democratic struggle against capitalism might emerge. With essays by
Ariella Aisha Azoulay, Siobhan Angus, Kajri Jain, Walter Benn
Michaels, T. J. Clark, John Paul Ricco, Blake Stimson, Chris
Stolarski, Tong Lam, and Jacob Emery.
What makes photographs different from other kinds of documents that
historians use to explain what happened in the past? What can
photographic images do that other documents cannot? Can photography
accurately depict labor? Contributors to this issue examine these
questions with both fine art photography and visual archives of
many kinds: state, corporate, family, trade union, ethnographic,
photojournalistic, and environmental. They investigate the ways
that photography has been central to both the expropriation and
exploitation of labor and the potential of photography to enable
new and radical approaches to historicizing the study of working
peoples and labor. Articles showcase methodologically generative
research that builds upon the recent boom in theoretical work in
the fields of visual cultural studies and photography to
reinvigorate historical studies of work. Contributors: Siobhan
Angus, Ian Bourland, Oliver Coates, Kevin Coleman, Clare Corbould,
Adrian De Leon, Rick Halpern, Daniel James, Tong Lam, Walter Benn
Michaels, Jessica Stites Mor, Carol Quirke, Jayeeta Sharma, Erica
Toffoli, Daniel Zamora
Siobhan Harper is a Private Investigator hired to find out if a
wealthy father or son died first. Millions are riding on the
outcome. Follow Siobhan as she and her team uncover the truth.
In the early twentieth century, the Boston-based United Fruit
Company controlled the production, distribution, and marketing of
bananas, the most widely consumed fresh fruit in North America. So
great was the company’s power that it challenged the sovereignty
of the Latin American and Caribbean countries in which it operated,
giving rise to the notion of company-dominated “banana
republics.” In A Camera in the Garden of Eden, Kevin Coleman
argues that the “banana republic” was an imperial constellation
of images and practices that was checked and contested by ordinary
Central Americans. Drawing on a trove of images from four enormous
visual archives and a wealth of internal company memos, literary
works, immigration records, and declassified US government
telegrams, Coleman explores how banana plantation workers, women,
and peasants used photography to forge new ways of being while also
visually asserting their rights as citizens. He tells a dramatic
story of the founding of the Honduran town of El Progreso, where
the United Fruit Company had one of its main divisional offices,
the rise of the company now known as Chiquita, and a sixty-nine day
strike in which banana workers declared their independence from
neocolonial domination. In telling this story, Coleman develops a
new set of conceptual tools and methods for using images to open up
fresh understandings of the past, offering a model that is
applicable far beyond this pathfinding study.
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