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Toward a Synthesized History of Photography: A Conceptual Genealogy of Shashin

Toward a Synthesized History of Photography: A Conceptual Genealogy of Shashin By the 1870s photography in Japan came to be called shashin , a term introduced from China and used in Japan since the eighteenth century. This article approaches the history of photography through the conceptual framework that surrounded shashin in the decades before its pairing with photography. What did shashin indicate in the context of the prephotographic production of images? What kinds of meanings were attached to the term that would later resonate with photographic technology? This article considers the study of materia medica in nineteenth-century Japan to explore these questions. It examines various pictorial representations characterized as shashin in nineteenth-century Owari domain to suggest that the term shashin was deployed to articulate, negotiate, and concretize a particular relationship between plants and their illustrations. Shifting focus from the technological history to the conceptual history of photography, this article aims to demonstrate the interrelatedness of methods of picture making and historically situated epistemologies through the concept of shashin . http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png positions asia critique Duke University Press

Toward a Synthesized History of Photography: A Conceptual Genealogy of Shashin

positions asia critique , Volume 18 (3) – Dec 1, 2010

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Publisher
Duke University Press
Copyright
Duke University Press
ISSN
1067-9847
eISSN
1527-8271
DOI
10.1215/10679847-2010-015
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

By the 1870s photography in Japan came to be called shashin , a term introduced from China and used in Japan since the eighteenth century. This article approaches the history of photography through the conceptual framework that surrounded shashin in the decades before its pairing with photography. What did shashin indicate in the context of the prephotographic production of images? What kinds of meanings were attached to the term that would later resonate with photographic technology? This article considers the study of materia medica in nineteenth-century Japan to explore these questions. It examines various pictorial representations characterized as shashin in nineteenth-century Owari domain to suggest that the term shashin was deployed to articulate, negotiate, and concretize a particular relationship between plants and their illustrations. Shifting focus from the technological history to the conceptual history of photography, this article aims to demonstrate the interrelatedness of methods of picture making and historically situated epistemologies through the concept of shashin .

Journal

positions asia critiqueDuke University Press

Published: Dec 1, 2010

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