ARH (Spring 2017): History of Photography T/R 11:00 a.m. 12:15 p.m. in Cone 107 (WAM)

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George Dimock g_dimock@uncg.edu 227 Cone Building Office hours by appointment ARH 350-01 (Spring 2017): History of Photography T/R 11:00 a.m. 12:15 p.m. in Cone 107 (WAM) This is an advanced undergraduate course that focuses on the history and theory of photography with an emphasis on photography as a creative form of visual expression in 20th & 21st-century American culture. A radical proposition underlies the logic of this course: namely, that photography (broadly defined) has been the most influential visual medium of modern times. The implications of this thesis will be explored throughout the semester. Continuing themes throughout the course will be photography as a mediated transcription of the real and the complexities of photography as a means of creative expression poised between the political engagements of social documentary and the visual pleasure of a modernist (formalist) aesthetics. The emphasis throughout will be on informed discussion and personal critical responses to texts and images. Students will be challenged to engage in variously structured ways with each other and with their teacher. Close reading, understood as a crucial activity situated at the heart of liberal humanism, will be practiced in an overtly self-conscious and critical fashion. To this end, each student will be asked to confront, at length and with undivided attention, a wide-ranging series of texts included in a Course Packet (see below). In an earlier, pre-digital age, there was a general default expectation with regard to the ratio of time spent reading relative to time spent in the classroom: two hours of reading per week for every course credit hour. This means that I will be counting on you to budget six hours per week of concentrated and undistracted close reading time. Given the screen-centered nature of the present culture, this may take some commitment and perseverance on your part. Deep literacy (to be discussed) is at the heart of this course. Students will be expected to consult UNCG s Canvas and UNCG e-mail on a regular basis as a way of keeping updated as to all course assignments and changes as we go. Required s -- Course Packet It is an essential part of this course that you spend time, energy, and care in creating your own bound hardcopy version of the Course Packet (DUE: Thurs., Jan. 26). These texts constitute the objects of study for the 3 exams. They should be read carefully according to the timetable listed in the Class Schedule (see below). Bring your CRP to every class (PLEASE!) Grading I will be doing my best to separate out my role as teacher, ally, and advocate for the pleasures and difficulties of photography and the history thereof from that of authority, gatekeeper, and grader. (It s my job to do both.) To this end I will be using a contract grading system. The successful completion of the following requirements will insure a final course grade of B+: 1. No more than 2 [two] unexcused absences for the Semester. 2. Timely completion of all reading assignments (before or after the corresponding lecture). 3. A combined average of 75 points out of 100 on the three exams. [See p. 6 for Grading Scale] 4. Good-faith class participation in group work, class discussions, conferences with me, etc. 1

[Please note: Class # 10 on Feb. 16 th and Class # 18 on March 23rd will NOT meet as regularly scheduled. You are expected to attend two evening lectures on each of those same two Thursdays instead. Please make every effort now to organize your schedule to make this happen.] Course Upgrade Those of you interested in a higher grade will need to fulfill all requirements for the B+ (1-4 listed above) and achieve a combined average score on the Midterm and Final Exams of 88-92 (A-), 93-96 (A), and 97-100 (A+). 1. 1/17 Course Preliminaries 2. 1/19 Looking,, and Interpretation [1] John Szarkowski, The Photographer s Eye 3. 1/24 Early Histories: Daguerre & Talbot [2] John Berger, Understanding a Photograph Class Schedule (Subject to Change!) 4. 1/26 Photography & Modernism * [Course Packets Due before Class] s [3] Charles Baudelaire, On Photography from The Salon of 1859 [4] Julia Margaret Cameron, Annals of My Glass House (1874) 5. 1/31 Lewis Hine [5] Lewis Hine, On Social Photography 6. 2/2 Alfred Stieglitz [6] Alfred Stieglitz, How the Steerage Happened 7. 2/7 Lucinda Devlin: Sightlines (Weatherspoon Art Museum Exhibition) [7] Lisa Hostetler, Inside Out: Lucinda Devlin s Disembodied Rooms and Encultured Spaces 8. 2/8 Edward S. Curtis, The North American Indian s [8] Edward S. Curtis and The North American Indian [9] David R.M. Beck, The Myth of the Vanishing Race 2

9. 2/14 Eugene Atget [10] Marina Warner, The Paris of Phantom Review Article of ATGET'S SEVEN ALBUMS by Molly Nesbit (Yale University Press). [ The New York Times, April 11, 1993] *10. 2/16 No class. We will attend the following exhibition and evening lecture instead: Stephen Fletcher, Light and Air: The Photography of Bayard Wootten Thursday, February 16, 5:00 p.m. GPS (Greensboro Project Space) The Anvil Building, 219 W Lewis St, Greensboro, NC 27406 11. (2/21) Exam # 1 on Classes 1-10 (Slide Identifications, Text Identifications, True/False & Multiple Choice Questions) 12. 2/23 Susan Sontag s On Photography s [11] Susan Sontag, In Plato s Cave 13. 2/28 Susan Sontag (continued) 14. 3/2 Dorothea Lange s [12] Dorothea Lange, The Assignment I ll Never Forget 15. 3/7 Walker Evans s [13] Quotations from James Agee, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men [14] Jack Finnegan, Human Divinity (The Brooklyn Rail) 16. 3/9 Henri Cartier-Bresson [15] Henri Cartier-Bresson, The Decisive Moment 17. 3/21 Roy DeCarava s [16] A.D. Coleman, Thru Black Eyes SPRING BREAK *18. 3/23 No class. Evening Lecture at 7:00 p.m. in the Weatherspoon Auditorium George Dimock, The Poetics of Incongruity in the Photographs of Lucinda Devlin 19. 3/28 Robert Frank s [17] Robert Frank, Statement [18] Jack Kerouac, Introduction to The Americans 3

20. 3/30 Exam # 2 on Classes 12-19 21. 4/4 Martha Rosler [19] Martha Rosler, In, Around, and Afterthoughts (On Documentary Photography) 22. 4/6 Allan Sekula [20] Allan Sekula, On the Invention of Photographic Meaning 23. 4/11 Sally Mann [21] Richard B. Woodward, The Disturbing Photography of Sally Mann 24. 4/13 Barbara Kruger, Cindy Sherman, and Sherrie Levine (Postmodern Photography) [22] Douglas Crimp, The Photographic Activity of Postmodernism 25. 4/18 Jeff Wall [23] Arthur Lubow, Jeff Wall: The Luminist, The New York Times Magazine (2/25/07) 26. 4/20 Joel Sternfeld [24] John Berger, The Ambiguity of the Photograph 27. 4/25 TBA 28. 4/27 Exam #3 on Classes 21-27 (Student Course Evaluations) Course Packet Assembly Information This course relies heavily on a Course Packet (CRP). The theory and practice of reading and of putting words to images will be a crucial issue throughout the semester. In order for all of us to be on the same page (literally), each student is required to assemble the CRP according to the following guidelines. (Please note all texts are available under Files in Canvas.) 1. Title page (see template) 2. Syllabus 3. s (# s 1-24) should be printed, numbered, and bound together in the order listed. Please note: the form of binding is up to you. The requirement is that the completed Course 4

Packet be stable & easily transportable and that your NAME appear on the front cover. The first major graded assignment of the semester will be to successfully create your Course Packet. It is due before class on Thursday, January 26. A further cautionary note: It will take time, patience, and careful attention to assemble this crucial document. Do not try to do this assignment quickly or at the last minute. It will only make you frustrated. I urge you to help save the planet by finding a printer that will print out your documents on both sides of the page. TEXTS for CRP (To be Assembled in the Following Order) [1] John Szarkowski, The Photographer s Eye [2] John Berger, Understanding a Photograph [3] Charles Baudelaire, On Photography from The Salon of 1859 [4] Julia Margaret Cameron, Annals of My Glass House (1874) [5] Lewis Hine, On Social Photography [6] Alfred Stieglitz, How the Steerage Happened [7] Lisa Hostetler, Inside Out: Lucinda Devlin s Disembodied Rooms and Encultured Spaces [8] Edward S. Curtis and The North American Indian [9] David R.M. Beck, The Myth of the Vanishing Race [10] Marina Warner, The Paris of Phantom Review Article of ATGET'S SEVEN ALBUMS [11] Susan Sontag, In Plato s Cave [12] Dorothea Lange, The Assignment I ll Never Forget [13] Quotations from James Agee, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men [14] Jack Finnegan, Human Divinity (The Brooklyn Rail) [15] Henri Cartier-Bresson, The Decisive Moment [16] A.D. Coleman, Thru Black Eyes [17] Robert Frank, Statement [18] Jack Kerouac, Introduction to The Americans [19] Martha Rosler, In, Around, and Afterthoughts (On Documentary Photography) [20] Allan Sekula, On the Invention of Photographic Meaning [21] Richard B. Woodward, The Disturbing Photography of Sally Mann [22] Douglas Crimp, The Photographic Activity of Postmodernism [23] Arthur Lubow, Jeff Wall: The Luminist, The New York Times Magazine (2/25/07) [24] John Berger, The Ambiguity of the Photograph 5

Grading Scale for Exams A+ 100-97 A 96-93 A- 92-88 B+ 87-75 B 74-70 B- 69-65 C+ 64-60 C 59-55 C- 54-50 D+ 49-45 D 44-40 D- 39-35 F 34-0 6