CfP: REFRAMING FAMILY PHOTOGRAPHY (Event: 09/2017, Toronto); DL: 01.09.2016

Reframing family via Website_quUniversity of Toronto: Toronto Photography Seminar (Web)

September 28-30, 2017
University of Toronto, Canada
Proposals by September 1st, 2016

What is family photography? Scholars have often understood the genre as simply snapshots of domestic scenes—images that reflect and produce normative notions of family. Yet, family photographs are more complex than we think: they can also include images taken by a wide spectrum of producers, including the press and the state; they frequently circulate between private and public spheres, linking personal memories with national and even global histories; and, just as importantly, they don’t just illustrate families, but also shape the very idea of family, as racialized and gendered social structures.

Foundational thinkers including Roland Barthes, Pierre Bourdieu, Jo Spence, Marianne Hirsch, Martha Langford, Deborah Willis, and others, have offered influential terms for investigating family photographs, respectively, as: an affective punctum; middlebrow art; means of reinforcing domestic ideology; conduit for postmemory; integrally linked to orality; a form of resistance; and at the heart of identity formation. Read more … (Web)