'Camera Indica: The Social Life of Indian Photographs is an exploration of the changing role of photographic portraiture in India over the past 150 years. It is the first anthropological study of photographic practice in the everyday lived reality of Indian society and combines historical and ethnographic perspectives.
Christopher Pinney looks at key "moments" in Indian photography and considers the ways in which photographic portraiture reflects changing political interests, a decreasing desire to fix identity, and a broader popular visual culture. A distinctive post-colonial Indian photographic practice emerges, characterized by a sophisticated inventiveness using techniques such as overpainting, collage, composite printing and doubling. A substantial part of the book is concerned with the production of such images by studios in a small central Indian town, and the reader is given a vivid sense of their use and significance.' (Excerpt from back cover)
Includes glossary of Hindi words and bibliographical references.
Christopher Pinney looks at key "moments" in Indian photography and considers the ways in which photographic portraiture reflects changing political interests, a decreasing desire to fix identity, and a broader popular visual culture. A distinctive post-colonial Indian photographic practice emerges, characterized by a sophisticated inventiveness using techniques such as overpainting, collage, composite printing and doubling. A substantial part of the book is concerned with the production of such images by studios in a small central Indian town, and the reader is given a vivid sense of their use and significance.' (Excerpt from back cover)
Includes glossary of Hindi words and bibliographical references.
Access level
Onsite
author
publisher
Location code
REF.PIC
Language
English
Keyword
photography,  visual culture,  portraiture,  India
Publication/Creation date
1998
No of pages
240
ISBN / ISSN
1861890060
No of copies
1
Content type
monograph
Chapter headings
Preface
Prologue
1. 'Stern Fidelity' and 'Penetrating Certainty'
2. Indian Eyes
3. Chambers of Dreams
Epilogue
What does this mean?
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