The fourth edition of this comprehensive history of photography spans the entire history of the medium, from its early development to current practice, and provides a focused understanding of the cultural contexts in which photographers have lived and worked. Mary Warner Marien discusses photography from a truly global viewpoint and examines a wide-range of images through the lenses of art, science, travel, war, fashion, the mass media, and individual photographers. Professional, amateur,and art photographers are all represented, with "Portrait" boxes devoted to highlighting important individuals and "Focus" boxes charting particular cultural debates. This indispensable book shows how photography has charted, shaped, and sharpened our perception of the world.
this book is dense with information and is especially good on the very early days of photography. there is less emphasis on more recent photographs and their impact on culture...even the Dorthea Lange, Walker Evans era is, for me touched too lightly upon. I also think there isn't enough on the impact of magazines like Life and National Geographic on the construction of cultural consciousness. But in all, a book that warrants endless perusing. I'm sad to have to return it to the library.
I haven't been in school for photography in 15 years and recently was given several boxes of my college photo professor's books so I read this textbook over a couple months last year. An overview of not just the history of photography, but its role in society, its context, and how it communicates with the world at large. Tons of niche, smaller, and unexpected moments in the medium and not just "the greats". Definitely keeping this around for reference.
Not a bad textbook, it's good because it has a lot of photo's in it and they are colored so that's nice and it's much easier to get an idea of what the author is saying when there is actually something to go on. It's quite easy to read as well and I didn't find that I had to re-read it a ton of times to understand what Marien was getting at which made it quite easy to study from as well. My only real problem with it was I found it jumped around far too much for my liking and I disliked the artist profiles that were randomly stuck in the text because you'd begin reading a sentence and then all of a sudden one of those would be there. Overall it's a good textbook. A bit too expensive though. I have issues paying $107 for something I'm gonna highlight in.
This had become an excellent resource in my teaching practice. Very easy to read, very comprehensive in its coverage of the early years of photography.