Pierre Bourdieu: Photography: A Middle-brow Art (1965/1990)

7 October 2012, dusan

The everyday practice of photography by millions of amateur photographers – the family snapshots, the holiday prints, the wedding portraits – may seem to be a spontaneous and highly personal activity. But Bourdieu and his associates show that few cultural activities are more structured and systematic than the social uses of this ordinary art.

This perceptive and wide-ranging analysis of the practice of photography brings out the logic implicit in this cultural field. The norms which define the occasions and the objects of photography serve to display the socially differentiated functions of, and attitudes towards, the photographic image and act. For some social groups, photography is primarily a means of preserving the present and reproducing the euphoric moments of collective celebration, whereas for other groups it is the occasion of an aesthetic judgement, in which photos are endowed with the dignity of works of art.

With Luc Boltanski, Robert Castel, Jean-Claude Chamboredon, and Dominique Schnapper
First published in French as Un art moyen by Les Editions de Minuit, 1965
Translated by Shaun Whiteside
Publisher Polity Press, in association with Blackwell Publishers, 1990
ISBN 0745605230, 0745617158
218 pages

publisher
google books

PDF (no OCR)


One Response to “Pierre Bourdieu: Photography: A Middle-brow Art (1965/1990)”

  1. sorin on July 23, 2013 10:09 am

    in 1965 (the year of the french original book) Borudieu writes this article

    Pierre Bourdieu, “ Le paysan et la photographie ”, Revue française de sociologie, VI, 2, avril-juin 1965, p.164-174 (avec M.-C. Bourdieu)
    posted http://monoskop.org/File:Article_rfsoc_0035-2969_1965_num_6_2_1897.pdf

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