Titre | Ruins, Ruination, and Fieldwork Photography | |
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Auteur | Max Woodworth | |
Revue | China perspectives | |
Numéro | no 2021/4 Ruins, Rubble, and Abandoned Places in China: Exploring Ordinary Spaces | |
Rubrique / Thématique | Special Feature |
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Page | 9-19 | |
Résumé anglais |
This article offers a self-reflexive critique of ruins as method by examining side-by-side the production, circulation, and meaning-making processes around the ruin photography of ghost cities in China and the author's own production of a fieldwork archive of the same photographed spaces. The ruin is commonly understood in recent scholarship to be a deeply ideological artefact with meanings contingent on class-inflected practices of ruin appreciation. In a similar vein, photography of urban ruins has been heavily criticised for allegedly aestheticising social ruin and economic decline. The critique of ruin photography as a practice of ideological claim-making or as a form of critical engagement merits scrutiny in light of this issue's field research practices looking at ruins in China. More specifically, photography is a standard part of fieldwork, including the author's. The aim of this article, then, is to ask how and why photographs of urban ruins in China differ across image-making practices? How are fieldwork photos of ruins, the kinds of photos that generate a data archive and are used in scholarly publications, resonant with other ideological claim-making purposes of ruin photography? How might we account for the political valences of image aesthetics when photographs are a vital part of scholarly efforts? Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals) |
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Article en ligne | http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/12750 |