1st Edition

The Extraordinary Archive of Arthur J. Munby Photographing Class and Gender in the Nineteenth Century

By Sarah Edge Copyright 2017
304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

In the mid-1860s Arthur J Munby began to collect the first mass-produced photographic images of working-class women in England, recording fascinating details about the women, the places he purchased the photographs and the raging debates on this new commercial practice of photography, in accompanying diaries. Many of these images – not to mention Munby’s fascinating diaries - have never been... Read more

Introduction: The Munby Archive 1 Academically Locating the Archive: History and Theory of Photography – The Nineteenth Century 2 What is a Photograph? 3 Th e City, Photography and Relations of Looking 4 Who was Munby? Useful Readings of the Munby Archive 5 Munby and the Turn to Photography: Hannah, the Private Urban Collection and the Search for Phot, 7 Dressing Above Your Station and Making it Work for Him: Domestic Photographs of the Urban Working-C lass Woman 8 Under the Skin: Munby’s Photographs of Facially Disfigured Women – Th e Real and the Symbolic, Appendix: Th e Photographic Archiveographic Truth 6 Starting to Collect: Munby and his Turn to Commercially Produced Photographs of Working-C lass Women

Biography

Sarah Edge is Professor of Photography and Cultural Studies at the University of Ulster