Part 1
"Photographs may have placed greater importance on the visual over the written. A picture, after all, is worth a thousand words."
The idea that Photographs could have placed greater importance on the visual over the written is most has some merit to it. Certainly identifying objects in a picture is as basic and natural a function as there could be for most people. Reading written language takes quite a bit more effort to do.
By comparison, the training needed to process even basic written language versus the simplicity of identifying objects with no training should make it clear that at our most basic level we can easily relate with images. Lets not forget that many children start off learning language by relating words to pictures when learning even their own native language. ‘Left-brained’ or ‘right-brained’ verbally oriented or spatially oriented it all rests on a foundation set upon relating to the world first visually.
With this is mind it makes sense that the in 10 short years early American publications went from an average 100 pictures per week to around 903 picture per week (Keller 2007, 163). Pictures draw attention to themselves as a reader scans a page, and even in the modern world where photo retouching is commonplace a photo brings a sense of authenticity. A viewer can pick out the pieces of an image that they can relate too and carry that same relationship to the parts they are not familiar with. When a viewer sees a picture of savannah in Africa they can project themselves into the area. If they visited that same place they would be able to pick out the elements from the picture. A written description while possibly igniting a desire to visit an area being described intellectually or by a...
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...tion, department stores were, and still are, places where consumers are an audience to be entertained by commodities, where selling is mingled with amusement, where arousal of free-floating desire is as important as immediate purchase of particular items” (Williams 2007, 172).
Works Cited
Sontag, Susan. 2003. On photography. In Communication in history: Technology, culture, and society, 4th ed., edited by David Crowley and Paul Heyer, 166–70. Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
Keller, Ulrich. 2007. Early Photojournalism. 5th ed., edited by David Crowley and Paul Heyer, 161–168. Boston: Pearson A and B.
Williams, Rosalynd. 2007. Dream Worlds of Consumption. 5th ed., edited by David Crowley and Paul Heyer, 169–175. Boston: Pearson A and B
Crowley, David, and Paul Heyer, eds. 2007. Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society. 5th ed. Boston: Pearson A and B.
It’s important for the reader to imagine the full picture of the object. For example, describing the locations, the colors, shape, and any other characteristics will help the reader will imagine the scene in their head or the scenery. Goldberg uses William Carlos Williams poem “Daisy” as an example to show how he is being specific. In the poem he describes how a daisy looks, the season a daisy grows in, and other details about a daisy. Williams put your imagination and your six senses to work with the poem “Daisy”. For example, Williams uses the description “round yellow center” to describe how the center of the daisy looks. He tries to capture every detail of a daisy in his writing, but he didn’t only describe a daisy; he also describes the location of the
Having such an image before our eyes, often we fail to recognize the message it is trying to display from a certain point of view. Through Clark’s statement, it is evident that a photograph holds a graphic message, which mirrors the representation of our way of thinking with the world sights, which therefore engages other
Tolmachev, I. (2010, March 15). A history of Photography Part 1: The Beginning. Retrieved Febraury 2014, from tuts+ Photography: http://photography.tutsplus.com/articles/a-history-of-photography-part-1-the-beginning--photo-1908
"History of Art: History of Photography." History of Art: History of Photography. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 May 2014. .
In the chapter, “The Mirror with a Memory”, the authors, James Davidson and Mark Lytle, describe numerous things that evolved after the civil war, including the life of Jacob Riis, the immigration of new peoples in America, and the evolution of photography. The authors’ purpose in this chapter is to connect the numerous impacts photography had on the past as well as its bringing in today’s age.
Gustavon, Todd. Camera: A History of Photography from daguerreotype to Digital. New York, NY: Sterling Publishing, 2009. Intro p.2
Sontag, Susan. "Essay | Photography Enhances Our Understanding of the World." BookRags. BookRags. Web. 15 Apr. 2014.
Warren, Lynne. "Graciela Iturbide." Encyclopedia of Twentieth-century Photography: Volume 1 A-F. New York: Routledge, 2006. 809-10. Print.
Marrs, Suzanne. Eudora Welty(tm)s Photography: Images into Fiction. Critical Essays on Eudora Welty. W. Craig Turner and Lee Emling Harding. Boston, MA: G.K. Hall, 1989. 288-289.
Reading words off an image requires extra work of visualizing the events when one can simply glance at pictures and automatically acknowledge what the story is about. Marjane emotionally describes the war, “When I think we could have avoided it all… it just makes me sick that a million people would still be alive” (Satrapi 116). If one could decipher what these words meant, they would not be able to comprehend the concept because people would not know what represent “it” in the statement. Images of warfare are easily comprehended than described in words. With the topics of warfare, a visual aid of a thousand words is likely to have a much stronger impact to those reading the
For this source I chose the article, In Plato 's cave by Susan Sontag. The source talks about all of the different ways society looks at photographs. In the quote by Sontag she says,
The desire to stop time and preserve the way things were are the primary reasons why the majority of photography in the late nineteenth century focused on documenting dying traditions, practices, and ways of life...
While researching sources pertaining to photojournalism, I came across many authors who published literary works regarding photojournalism; particularly novels, scholarly journals, newspapers, and articles. These authors often concluded that photojournalism changed how many Americans viewed society. Photojournalism originated during 1853 when a photojournalist by the name of Carol Szathmari documented the Crimean War. Throughout the years, photojournalism became a form of journalism depending on images to tell a story. Jacob Riis, a newspaper reporter and a social reformer, helped introduced modern photojournalism when he introduced
The use of multiple images to propel a narrative allows the audience to learn something through the characters that are there. Bloomer (1990)’s study on visual perception also draws upon Newton (1998)’s concern, as he explores the multiple perspectives and views of the event. By using a series of images, the characters mood and tone can be established throughout different elements of what we see. This may be the people, the place itself or the items within the place. By having a narrative of photographs, the audience has an even deeper understanding of the reality of that moment or event as they see more than just the ‘big picture’ as
"A picture can paint a thousand words." I found the one picture in my mind that does paint a thousand words and more. It was a couple of weeks ago when I saw this picture in the writing center; the writing center is part of State College. The beautiful colors caught my eye. I was so enchanted by the painting, I lost the group I was with. When I heard about the observation essay, where we have to write about a person or thing in the city that catches your eye. I knew right away that I wanted to write about the painting. I don’t know why, but I felt that the painting was describing the way I felt at that moment.