CALL FOR PAPERS ON PHOTOGRAPHY AND EDUCATION

The shift to digitality in the capture and viewing of images has had a profound influence on the student experience and engagement with the image. Consequently the technological tools that have transformed the capture and viewing of the image, and also the new image-based activities that are facilitated by these technologies, determine the knowledge base that students bring to the classroom. The photograph, as a glossy printed cultural document is an alien concept to today’s student for whom the capture and reading of the image is largely mediated through an electronic interface. Captured electronically and referenced in pixels, the image is downloaded and interpreted on display devices, screens and interfaces instead of glossy photo-paper. The 21 st century experience of the photograph has been transformed; the process of viewing, storing and using the photo image has become processual. The capture of images in digital cultures acknowledge functions including formatting and file sizes; storage of the images references activities aligned to downloading, filing and file sharing; viewing the image involves searching and tagging practices. As this knowledge base changes, education practice that addresses images and image making needs to acknowledge the changing cultural and social landscape in which the construction and reception of images takes place. This article aims to assess whether critical discussions about visual cultures associated with images and image making in the 21 st century, are fully acknowledging the changes in the knowledge economy of photography. It argues that issues of access, production and consumption of images in the 21 st century, call for new theoretical approaches and new teaching strategies in

[1]  Etienne Wenger,et al.  Communities of Practice: Learning, Meaning, and Identity , 1998 .

[2]  L. Manovich,et al.  The language of new media , 2001 .

[3]  Martin Lister,et al.  A Sack in the Sand , 2007 .

[4]  J. Piaget The Psychology Of Intelligence , 1951 .

[5]  Andrew Murphie,et al.  Culture and Technology , 2003, Macmillan Education UK.

[6]  Ron Burnett,et al.  How Images Think , 2004 .

[7]  W. Benjamin The work of art in the age of mechanical reproduction , 2018, A Museum Studies Approach to Heritage.

[8]  J. Novak,et al.  Educational Psychology: A Cognitive View , 1969 .

[9]  Henry Jenkins Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide , 2006 .

[10]  José van Dijck,et al.  Digital photography: communication, identity, memory , 2008 .

[11]  Nancy A. Van House,et al.  Flickr and public image-sharing: distant closeness and photo exhibition , 2007, CHI Extended Abstracts.

[12]  Jay David Bolter,et al.  Writing Space: the Computer, Hypertext, and the History of Writing , 1990 .

[13]  G. Corso,et al.  The Social Construct of Writing and Thinking: Evidence of How the Expansion of Writing Technology Affects Consciousness , 1999 .

[14]  R. Chalfen Snapshot versions of life , 1987 .

[15]  Maurice Merleau-Ponty Phenomenology of Perception , 1964 .

[16]  J. Davies Display, Identity and the Everyday: Self-presentation through online image sharing , 2007 .

[17]  Sarah Kember Virtual Anxiety: Photography, New Technologies and Subjectivity , 1998 .

[18]  Tadao Ichikawa,et al.  A digital photography framework enabling affective awareness in home communication , 2000, Personal Technologies.

[19]  J. Slevin Internet and Society , 2000 .

[20]  Kerry Rodden,et al.  How do people manage their digital photographs? , 2003, CHI '03.

[21]  W. Mitchell The Reconfigured Eye: Visual Truth in the Post-Photographic Era , 1992 .

[22]  Martin Lister The Photographic Image in Digital Culture , 1995 .

[23]  D. Buckingham,et al.  Gotta Catch 'em all: Structure, Agency and Pedagogy in Children's Media Culture , 2003 .

[24]  Susan Murray,et al.  Digital Images, Photo-Sharing, and Our Shifting Notions of Everyday Aesthetics , 2008 .

[25]  D. Kolb Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source of Learning and Development , 1983 .