Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors

Photography, introduced to Russia in 1839, was nothing short of a sensation. Its rapid proliferation challenged the other arts, including painting and literature, as well as the very integrity of the self. If Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky greeted the camera with skepticism in the nineteenth century, numerous twentieth-century authors welcomed it with a warm embrace. As Katherine M. H. Reischl shows in Photographic Literacy, authors as varied as Leonid Andreev, Ilya Ehrenburg, and Alexander Solzhenitsyn picked up the camera and reshaped not only their writing practices but also the sphere of literacy itself.

For these authors, a single photograph or a photograph as illustration is never an endpoint; their authorial practices continually transform and animate the frozen moment. But just as authors used images to shape the reception of their work and selves, Russian photographers—including Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky and Alexander Rodchenko—used text to shape the reception of their visual work. From the diary to print, the literary word imbues that photographic moment with a personal life story, and frames and reframes it in the writing of history. In this primer on photographic literacy, Reischl argues for the central place that photography has played in the formation of the Russian literary imagination over the course of roughly seventy years. From image to text and back again, she traces the visual consciousness of modern Russian literature as captured through the lens of the Russian author-photographer.

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Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors

Photography, introduced to Russia in 1839, was nothing short of a sensation. Its rapid proliferation challenged the other arts, including painting and literature, as well as the very integrity of the self. If Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky greeted the camera with skepticism in the nineteenth century, numerous twentieth-century authors welcomed it with a warm embrace. As Katherine M. H. Reischl shows in Photographic Literacy, authors as varied as Leonid Andreev, Ilya Ehrenburg, and Alexander Solzhenitsyn picked up the camera and reshaped not only their writing practices but also the sphere of literacy itself.

For these authors, a single photograph or a photograph as illustration is never an endpoint; their authorial practices continually transform and animate the frozen moment. But just as authors used images to shape the reception of their work and selves, Russian photographers—including Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky and Alexander Rodchenko—used text to shape the reception of their visual work. From the diary to print, the literary word imbues that photographic moment with a personal life story, and frames and reframes it in the writing of history. In this primer on photographic literacy, Reischl argues for the central place that photography has played in the formation of the Russian literary imagination over the course of roughly seventy years. From image to text and back again, she traces the visual consciousness of modern Russian literature as captured through the lens of the Russian author-photographer.

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Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors

Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors

by Katherine M. H. Reischl
Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors

Photographic Literacy: Cameras in the Hands of Russian Authors

by Katherine M. H. Reischl

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Overview

Photography, introduced to Russia in 1839, was nothing short of a sensation. Its rapid proliferation challenged the other arts, including painting and literature, as well as the very integrity of the self. If Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky greeted the camera with skepticism in the nineteenth century, numerous twentieth-century authors welcomed it with a warm embrace. As Katherine M. H. Reischl shows in Photographic Literacy, authors as varied as Leonid Andreev, Ilya Ehrenburg, and Alexander Solzhenitsyn picked up the camera and reshaped not only their writing practices but also the sphere of literacy itself.

For these authors, a single photograph or a photograph as illustration is never an endpoint; their authorial practices continually transform and animate the frozen moment. But just as authors used images to shape the reception of their work and selves, Russian photographers—including Sergei Prokudin-Gorsky and Alexander Rodchenko—used text to shape the reception of their visual work. From the diary to print, the literary word imbues that photographic moment with a personal life story, and frames and reframes it in the writing of history. In this primer on photographic literacy, Reischl argues for the central place that photography has played in the formation of the Russian literary imagination over the course of roughly seventy years. From image to text and back again, she traces the visual consciousness of modern Russian literature as captured through the lens of the Russian author-photographer.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501730498
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 12/15/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 46 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Katherine M. H. Reischl is Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Princeton University. In addition to her work on Russian author-photographers, she has published on Soviet children’s books and the digital mediation of avant-garde journals.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration and Translation
Introduction: Chasing Pushkin's Photograph
1. Tolstoy in the Age of His Technological Reproducibility
2. The Diffusion of Domesticated Photography
3. Microgeography, Macroworld
4. Look Left, Young Man! The International Exchangeof Photo-Narratives
Conclusion: Nabokov, Solzhenitsyn, and the Anxiety of Photographic Authorship
Notes
Index

What People are Saying About This

Kevin Platt

Katherine M. H. Reischl shows how, for generations of Russian author-photographers, text and photography became essential in representations of the world and of the author. Photographic Literacy is essential for anyone interested in Russian institutions of authorship and media history and offers detailed accounts of important figures from Leo Tolstoy to Alexander Rodchenko.

Julie Buckler

This is a first-rate scholarly monograph. Reischl’s work brings together scholarly rigor, an excellent knowledge of sources, deft and expressive writing, insightful close-reading, and careful thinking.

Elizabeth Papazian

This book represents a truly significant contribution to literary criticism, offering a timely, in-depth, wide-ranging critical engagement of an issue of great current interest: how technology affects the evolution of cultural forms.

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