Framing Identity
Title | Framing Identity PDF eBook |
Author | Susan Close |
Publisher | Arp Books |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 9781894037297 |
Framing Identityexamines how Canadian women used photography as a social practice to establish identity. Specifically, Close studies the photographic practice of four, turn-of-the-twentieth-century women photographers: Mattie Gunterman (1872-1945), Geraldine Moodie (1854-1945), Ruby Gordon Peterkin (1887-1961), and Etta Sparks (1879-1917). From a revisionist point of view, it argues that photography is a social practice used by women professionals and amateurs as a vehicle to explore and establish identity. Framing Identitydefines photography as social practice and examines how women moved beyond making pictorial images to using photography as a form of speech to represent social issues. Key concepts and practices drawn from cultural analysis and issues related to identity, gender, post-colonialism, tourism and travel are mapped out. Close considers Gunterman’s photographs as a form of visual narrative within the context of the family album and the practice of amateur, women photographers. Moodie’s portraits of the Inuit are examined in terms of professional photographic practice and discourse on the representation of the Other. The book also analyzes the photographic albums of two Canadian army nurses, Peterkin and Sparks, who were stationed overseas during World War I. Close concludes her study with an overview of the history of women in photography in Canada and investigates various aspects of womens’ interaction with the medium.
Framing Identities
Title | Framing Identities PDF eBook |
Author | Wendy S. Hesford |
Publisher | U of Minnesota Press |
Pages | 252 |
Release | 1999 |
Genre | Critical pedagogy |
ISBN | 9781452903521 |
Framing the Nation and Collective Identities
Title | Framing the Nation and Collective Identities PDF eBook |
Author | Vjeran Pavlaković |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 262 |
Release | 2019-05-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1351381784 |
This book analyzes top-down and bottom-up strategies of framing the nation and collective identities through commemorative practices relating to events from the Second World War and the 1990s "Homeland War" in Croatia. With attention to media representations of commemorative events and opinion poll data, it draws on interviews and participant observation at commemorative events to focus on the speeches of political elites, together with the speeches of opposition politicians and other social actors (such as the Catholic Church, anti-fascist organizations and war veterans’ and victims’ organizations) who challenge official narratives. Offering innovative approaches to researching and analyzing commemorative practices in post-conflict societies, this examination of a nation’s transition from a Yugoslav republic to an independent state – and now the newest member of the European Union – constitutes a unique case study for scholars of cultural memory and identity politics interested in the production and representation of national identities in official narratives.
Framing Majismo
Title | Framing Majismo PDF eBook |
Author | Tara Zanardi |
Publisher | Penn State Press |
Pages | 583 |
Release | 2016-03-08 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 0271076682 |
Majismo, a cultural phenomenon that embodied the popular aesthetic in Spain from the second half of the eighteenth century, served as a vehicle to “regain” Spanish heritage. As expressed in visual representations of popular types participating in traditional customs and wearing garments viewed as historically Spanish, majismo conferred on Spanish “citizens” the pictorial ideal of a shared national character. In Framing Majismo, Tara Zanardi explores nobles’ fascination with and appropriation of the practices and types associated with majismo, as well as how this connection cultivated the formation of an elite Spanish identity in the late 1700s and aided the Bourbons’ objective to fashion themselves as the legitimate rulers of Spain. In particular, the book considers artistic and literary representations of the majo and the maja, purportedly native types who embodied and performed uniquely Spanish characteristics. Such visual examples of majismo emerge as critical and contentious sites for navigating eighteenth-century conceptions of gender, national character, and noble identity. Zanardi also examines how these bodies were contrasted with those regarded as “foreign,” finding that “foreign” and “national” bodies were frequently described and depicted in similar ways. She isolates and uncovers the nuances of bodily representation, ultimately showing how the body and the emergent nation were mutually constructed at a critical historical moment for both.
Framing Identity
Title | Framing Identity PDF eBook |
Author | Carol B. Conaway |
Publisher | |
Pages | 32 |
Release | 1996 |
Genre | Crown Heights (New York, N.Y.) |
ISBN |
History, Frankish Identity and the Framing of Western Ethnicity, 550–850
Title | History, Frankish Identity and the Framing of Western Ethnicity, 550–850 PDF eBook |
Author | Helmut Reimitz |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 529 |
Release | 2015-08-06 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1316381021 |
This pioneering study explores early medieval Frankish identity as a window into the formation of a distinct Western conception of ethnicity. Focusing on the turbulent and varied history of Frankish identity in Merovingian and Carolingian historiography, it offers a new basis for comparing the history of collective and ethnic identity in the Christian West with other contexts, especially the Islamic and Byzantine worlds. The tremendous political success of the Frankish kingdoms provided the medieval West with fundamental political, religious and social structures, including a change from the Roman perspective on ethnicity as the quality of the 'Other' to the Carolingian perception that a variety of Christian peoples were chosen by God to reign over the former Roman provinces. Interpreting identity as an open-ended process, Helmut Reimitz explores the role of Frankish identity in the multiple efforts through which societies tried to find order in the rapidly changing post-Roman world.
Framing the Falklands War
Title | Framing the Falklands War PDF eBook |
Author | James Aulich |
Publisher | |
Pages | 150 |
Release | 1992 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780335096831 |