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NavigationDisclaimerThese blog entries represent the views of their authors, not necessarily those of the CWRL, the University of Texas at Austin, or any of its affiliated entities. |
photographyA Serious Post about Legos?Submitted by timturner on Wed, 2008-01-30 11:34.art | photography | Visual Rhetoric
Behold, the generic and intimidating Lego "Bad Guy" for their new Indiana Jones series: As you may realize, Lego is engaging in a bit of revisionism: in the original films (at least in the first and third films), the "Bad Guys" were Nazis. Yet notice here that something is conspicuously absent from this little guy (in Lego lingo, a "minifig")... John Updike on the history of the snapshotSubmitted by John Jones on Mon, 2008-01-28 12:04.art | photography | visual analysis
The Torture/d AestheticSubmitted by timturner on Tue, 2008-01-22 22:44.fashion | photography | politics
So I'm not surprised to see that this particular aesthetic has made its way onto the runways and into the designs of John Galliano; I'm surprised it hasn't happened sooner (maybe it has? anyone?). What's interesting to me is the particular form these designs take, with their unmistakably medieval inflection: these designs are as much about the Inquisition as they are about Guantanamo. Is this trenchant (or maybe obvious) political critique, drawing a connection between the draconian measures of the Bush administration (so barbaric! so medieval!)? Or does it go too far, making light of serious infractions by implicitly connecting Lynndie England with court jesters and clowns? Political theatricsSubmitted by John Jones on Tue, 2008-01-22 22:21.photography | politics | theater | visual analysis
No Caption Needed has posted a brilliant analysis of the theatricality of presidential campaigns.
Jim Wilson/New York Times From the post:
Square AmericaSubmitted by LaurenMitchell on Sun, 2008-01-20 01:10.photography | popular culture
If you're interested in amateur photography or early twentieth century life in the U.S., check out this site Square America. Flickr hosts LOC photos; Smithsonian next?Submitted by John Jones on Sat, 2008-01-19 13:01.copyright | Flickr | folksonomies | photography
The Library of Congress has created its own Flickr homepage and posted 3,000 public-domain photos to the site. This first collection of the LOC’s 14 million images is part of a pilot project called “The Commons.” The images are labeled with the photographer’s name and short descriptions, but the LOC is relying on Flickr’s users to provide tags for the images. This is a fantastic idea. Not only is it great for the public, who will have easier access to these images, it should be great for the LOC, who are offloading to resource-intensive tasks—cataloguing and hosting the images—to a service that will do them both for free. Women in FilmSubmitted by Justin Tremel on Mon, 2007-11-05 14:52.film | gender | photography | race | rhetoric of the body | youtube
I recently read a New Yorker article that mentioned the spell-binding youtube video "Women in Film" seen below. It's quite mesmerizing, have a look. |




The site consists of collections of photographs found at garage sales and flea markets of American life during the first three quarters of the twentieth century.
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