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The polaroid image as photo-object

Buse, P

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Authors

P Buse



Abstract

This article is part of a larger project on the cultural history of Polaroid photography and draws on research done at the Polaroid Corporate archive at Harvard and at the Polaroid company itself. It identifies two cultural practices engendered by Polaroid photography, which, at the point of its extinction, has briefly flared into visibility again. It argues that these practices are mistaken as novel but are in fact rediscoveries of practices that stretch back as many as five decades. The first section identifies Polaroid image-making as a photographic equivalent of what Tom Gunning calls the ‘cinema of attractions’. That is, the emphasis in its use is on the display of photographic technologies rather than the resultant image. Equally, the common practice, in both fine art and vernacular circles, of making composite pictures with Polaroid prints, draws attention from image content and redirects it to the photo as object.

Citation

Buse, P. (2010). The polaroid image as photo-object. Journal of Visual Culture, 9(2), 189-208. https://doi.org/10.1177/1470412910372754

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Aug 1, 2010
Deposit Date Oct 28, 2011
Publicly Available Date Apr 5, 2016
Journal Journal of Visual Culture
Print ISSN 1470-4129
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Issue 2
Pages 189-208
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/1470412910372754
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1470412910372754

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