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On photography

Front Cover
39 Reviews
Anchor Books, 1977 - Photography - 208 pages
Winner of the National Book Critics' Circle Award for Criticism (1977), this is "a brilliant analysis of the profound changes photographic images have made in our way of looking of the world and ourselves over the lost 140 years."-Washington Post BOOK WORLD

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Review: On Photography

User Review  - Mel - Goodreads

Though at times difficult to read, Sontag's essays on photography consistently blew my hair back. A lot of the stuff she writes about is wildly prescient and it definitely got me thinking. There were ... Read full review

Review: On Photography

User Review  - Thomas Haverkamp - Goodreads

I read this book in two episodes due to all the Christmas events. But when I then finished it I knew that I was quite impressed with this book. The book is over 30 years old and you would expect that ... Read full review

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Contents

In Platos Cave
3
America Seen Through Photographs Darkly
27
Photographic Evangels
115
Copyright

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About the author (1977)

Susan Sontag, an influential cultural critic with a Harvard master's degree in philosophy, is noted for taking radical positions and venturing outrageous interpretations. Proclaiming a "new sensibility," she supported the cause of pop art and underground films in the 1960s. Her reputation as a formidable critic has been established by numerous reviews, essays, and articles in the New York Review of Books, the N.Y. Times, Harper's, and other periodicals. Against Interpretation (1966) includes her controversial essay "Notes on Camp," first published in Partisan Review. The title of the book introduces her argument against what she sees as the distortion of an original work by the countless critics who bend it to their own interpretations. "The aim of all commentary on art," she writes, "should be to make works of art---and, by analogy, our own experience---more, rather than less, real to us." Sontag has a mature modernist sensibility, but manages to depict the avant-garde in language accessible to any reader. She has lectured extensively around the United States and has taught philosophy at Harvard, Sarah Lawrence, and Columbia. She is a frequent and popular television discussion personality, particularly on contemporary issues of illness or feminism, although many feminists are unhappy that she does not declare herself to be a "feminist critic." She is also, less successfully, a fiction writer.

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