Imaging the French Revolution Discussion
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3. Can imagery be addressed in new ways with on-line methods? Can a collective discussion of imagery produce more scholarly knowledge than just an individual analysis? Is it possible to analyze electronic images in a scholarly manner without examining the material object? texture of the paper? printing technique? style? color?
 
Advantage of examining the material object Jack Censer, 6-1-03, 3:33 PM
the material object Lynn Hunt, 6-23-03, 10:52 PM
RE: Advantage of examining the material object Vivian Cameron, 7-6-03, 6:28 PM
On-line Collaboration Wayne Hanley, 6-6-03,
9:53 AM
On-line Collaboration Barbara Day-Hickman, 7-1-03,
4:22 PM
RE: On-line Collaboration Joan B. Landes,
7-14-03, 3:28 PM
zooming on images Warren Roberts, 7-2-03, 2:08 PM
on-line collaboration Vivian Cameron, 7-6-03,
6:35 PM
on material objects and digital technology Joan B. Landes, 7-12-03, 5:33 PM
Final thoughts Warren Roberts, 7-19-03, 8:03 AM
on-line collaboration Barbara Day-Hickman,
7-24-03, 4:28 PM

Subject: on-line collaboration
Posted By: Vivian Cameron
Date Posted: 7-6-03, 6:35 PM

What a collective discussion can contribute is a focus on issues, details, etc. that individual scholars might not have considered. I very much liked Jack and Lynn’s construction of three axes within the corpus of images: caricature vs. “realistic”; pro-revolutionary vs. anti-revolutionary; contemporary vs. later images. Since so many of the images included on the web-site are what I would call “symbolic,” I would add another axis: symbolic (including allegorical) vs. narrative. A number of the images that Wayne Hanley analyzes would fit in here. I think that Barbara’s point about the ideological position of the artist/artisan and the ideological connection with compositional elements such as symmetry, balance, and linearity, to which I would add decorum, gestural language and emotion, is essential to our understanding of many of these works. I found Warren’s discussion of the lamppost really illuminating (sorry about the pun) and probably right on, given how artists think about how to formulate issues (politics) visually.
 
 
 
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