静止的图片:1870-1930年美国流行视觉文化中的等待公众

IF 0.1 4区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Early Popular Visual Culture Pub Date : 2022-05-30 DOI:10.1080/17460654.2022.2065732
Justin T. Clark
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近年来,学者们越来越关注等待的历史,特别是在医学、商业、政治和文化领域。本文通过追溯1870年至1930年间美国流行文化中等待的视觉表现形式的演变,为这段历史做出了贡献。当当代的插画家、摄影师和艺术家们诠释着一个充斥着等待的主题的都市景观时,他们帮助将一种越来越常规的体验与一套持久的意义——例如效率、便利、平等、舒适和异化——结合起来,同时借鉴和重塑了社会表现的旧视觉传统。等待图像的最初主题是排队,漫画家和素描艺术家用它来想象公民身份界限的变化。随着20世纪最后几十年城市现实主义和“揭发丑闻”的流行,等待的意象从讽喻的排队变成了移民、贫困和失业的真实场景。在20世纪,等待的原型场景再次发生了变化,这次是一个更以消费者为导向的景观,包括不朽的火车站、百货商店候车室、私人和公共官僚空间。到20世纪20年代,这篇文章总结道,等待意象已经从一种批判工具——一种表达社会危机的手段——转变为一种常见的广告修辞。本文试图对这一比喻的起源进行主题分析,而不是形式分析,以揭示慢,以及速度和加速,如何成为现代化美国自我形象的重要组成部分。
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Motionless pictures: the waiting public in popular American visual culture, 1870-1930
ABSTRACT In recent years, scholars have paid increasing attention to the histories of waiting, particularly in medicine, business, politics, and culture. This essay contributes to that history by tracing the evolving visual representation of waiting in popular American culture between 1870 and 1930. As contemporary illustrators, photographers and artists interpreted a metropolitan landscape populated by waiting subjects, they helped inscribe an increasingly routine experience with an enduring set of meanings – efficiency, convenience, equality, comfort, and alienation, for instance – while at the same time drawing upon and reinventing older visual traditions of social representation. The original subjects of waiting imagery were queues, which cartoonists and sketch artists used to imagine the shifting boundaries of citizenship. As urban realism and ‘muckraking’ came into vogue in the century’s final decades, the imagery of waiting shifted from allegorical queues to literal scenes of migration, poverty and unemployment. In the twentieth century, the archetypal scene of waiting shifted once again, this time to a more consumer-oriented landscape of monumental railroad stations, department store waiting rooms, and private and public bureaucratic spaces. By the 1920s, this article concludes, waiting imagery had transitioned from a tool of critique – a means of articulating social crisis – into a common advertising trope. This article attempts a thematic rather than formal analysis of the origins of that trope, in order to reveal how slowness, as much as speed and acceleration, became an essential part of the modernizing United States’ self-image.
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来源期刊
Early Popular Visual Culture
Early Popular Visual Culture HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.20
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发文量
50
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