Beschreibung:
Does a photograph freeze a moment of time? What does it mean to treat a photographic image as an artefact? In the 21st century, do new digital and social forms change the status of photography as archival or objective - or are they revealing something more fundamental about photography's longstanding relationships with time and knowledge?
Notes on contributorsList of FiguresPreface 1. Introduction: From Archaeology to Photology, Lesley McFadyen and Dan Hicks2. The Transformation of Visual Archaeology, Dan Hicks3. 'At any given moment': duration in archaeology and photography, Mark Knight and Lesley McFadyen4. Exposing Archaeology: Beauty, Time, and Mistaken Images, J.A. Baird5. Parafictions: a Polaroid Archaeology, Joanna Alves-Ferreira6. Archaeology, Photography and Poetics, Sergio Gomes7. Between the medium and the metaphor: multiple temporalities in photography and archaeology, Antonia Thomas8. Photographing Buildings, James Dixon9. Photographing Graffiti, Alex Hale and Iain Anderson10. Photography and Intangible Heritage, Samuel Derbyshire11. The Aerial Imagination, Oscar Aldred Index