Truth claim (photography)

Truth claim (photography)

The truth claim of photography is the term used by Tom Gunning to describe the prevalent belief that traditional photographs accurately depict reality. He states that the truth claim relies upon both the indexicality and visual accuracy of photographs [Tom Gunning, "What's the Point of an Index? Or, Faking Photograps", "NORDICOM Review", vol. 5, no.1/2 (September 2004), p.41 ] .

Indexicality

Peirces termindexicalityrefers to the physical relationship between the object photographed and the resulting image [Gunning, "ibid.", p.39-40] . Paul Levinson emphasises the ability of photography to capture or reflecta literal energy configuration from the real worldthrough a chemical process [Paul Levinson, "The Soft Edge: a Natural History and Future of the Information Revolution" (London: Routledge, 1997), p.37] . Light sensitive emulsion on the photographic negative is transformed by light passing through the lens and diaphragm of a camera [Gunning, "op. cit.", p.40] . Levinson relates this characteristic of the photograph to its objectivity and reliability, echoing Andre Bazins belief that photography is free from thesinof subjectivity [Levinson, "op. cit.", p.40, 41, 47] .

A similar argument has been made for motion pictures. Lev Manovich labels cinema theart of the index”, its traditional identity lying in its ability to capture reality [Lev Manovich, "What is Digital Cinema", http://www.manovich.net/text/digital-cinema, (1995: accessed 1 February 2006)] . Denis McQuail likewise argues that film is capable of manipulating theseeming reality of the photographic message without loss of credibility” [Denis McQuail, "McQuail's Mass Communication Theory (4th Ed.)" (London: Sage, 2000), p.23] .

Visual Accuracy

Gunning states that a photograph must also haveiconicity”. To representtruth”, it must resemble the object it represents, which is not an inevitable characteristic of an index [Gunning, "op. cit.", p.40] .

Consequences of theTruth Claim

For Individuals

Levinson suggests that icons have a powerful effect on individuals, particularly thedirect imagedue to thesheer ease and sensual satisfaction" of viewing it [Levinson, "op. cit.", p.37, 48] .

Gunning attributes the human fascination with photographs with a sense of the relationship between photography and reality, though he claims that theperceptual richness and nearly infinite detailof the image itself is more significant than a knowledge of its indexicality. He cites Bazins idea that photography has anirrational power to bear away our faith” [Gunning, "op. cit.", p.45-6] . Further, Susan Sontag relates the belief in a photographs ability to capturerealityto the development of certain human practices. Since a picture confers on eventsa kind of immortality (and importance) it would never otherwise have enjoyed” [Susan Sontag, "On Photography" (London: Penguin, 1977), p.11] , she explains, the act of taking photographs has become essential to the experience of world travel. The possibility oftruephotographs leads to a compulsion to “ [convert] experience into an imagein order tomake real what one is experiencing” [Sontag, "ibid.", p.9] .

For Society

Understanding of Reality

David Croteau and William Hoynes suggest that the prevalence of photographic images has blurred the distinction between image and reality, referring topseudo-events”, in Daniel Boorstins wordssuch as press conferences, televised political debates, orphoto opportunities’ - that exist only to create images [David Croteau and William Hoynes, "Media Society: Industries, Images and Audiences (3rd Ed.) (Thousand Oaks: Pine Forge Press, 2003), p.309-10 ] . Further, Neil Postman argues that the photograph has redefined societys understanding of information and truth:truth is in the seeing, not in the thinking” [Croteau and Hoynes, "ibid.", p.309] . Postman suggests that the proliferation of photography led to the replacement of language with images asour dominant means for constructing, understanding, and testing reality” [Neil Postman, "Technopoly: the Surrender of Culture to Technology" (New York: Vintage Books, 1993, c1992), p.68] . Sontag shares this view, suggesting thattherealisticview of the world compatible with bureaucracy redefines knowledgeas techniques of information” [Sontag, "op. cit.", p.22] .

ocial Organisation

In Sontags view, a consequence of photography becoming a primary means for understanding reality is the emergence ofbureaucratic cataloguing”. She claims that photographys perceived ability to give information results in the bureaucratic organization of modern states. Institutions of control, such as the police, are able to survey and controlincreasingly mobile populationsthrough photographic documents, such as passports or identity cards [Sontag, "ibid.", p.5, 21] .

Desensitization

Sontag also argues that through repeatedly capturing and viewing reality through photographs, their subjects can become less real. She claims thataesthetic distance seems built into the very experience of looking at photographs”, and also that the sheer volume of horrific images throughout the world has produced afamiliarity with atrocity, making the horrible seem more ordinarymaking it appear familiar, remoteinevitable” [Sontag, "ibid.", p.20-1] .

Hyperreality

Sontags view is akin to Jean Baudrillards theory ofhyperreality’, wherereality itself foundersas a result of an endlessreduplication of the realvia media such as photography [Jean Baudrillard, "Symbolic Exchange and Death" in Mark Poster (ed.), "Jean Baudrillard: Selected Writings' (2nd Ed.)" (Cambridge: Polity, 2001), p.147] . He claims that the possibility of infinite identical objects creates arelationship of equivalence, of indifference”, leading to theextinction of the original” [Baudrillard, "ibid.", p.140] .

Digital Photography

It has been argued that the digitisation of photography undermines itstruth claim”.

Potential for Manipulation

Levinson suggests that the digitisation of photography underminesthe very reliability of the photograph as mute, unbiased witness of reality” [Levinson, "op. cit.", p.41] because of the fallibility of technological manipulation and the potential for human refinement of production [Levinson, "ibid.", p.43] . Lev Manovich likewise questions the indexical identity of motion pictures, rather labelling cinema a sub-genre of painting, since it is possible to digitally modify frames, generate photorealistic images entirely using 3-D computer animation, andto cut, bend, stretch and stitch digitised film images into something which has perfect photographic credibility, although it was never actually filmed” [Manovich, "op. cit."] .

Loss of Indexicality

It has also been argued that digital photographs inevitably lack indexicality, based on an understanding ofcrucial distinctions between the analogue and the digitalin the way they recordreality’ [Martin Lister, "A Sack in the Sand: Photography in the Age of Information", "The Journal of Research into New Media Technologies", vol.13, no.3 (August 2007), p.252] . For instance, Frosh describes photographs ascodes without a message” – “repurposable visual content made of malleable info-pixels” [Lister, "ibid.", p262] .

The ContinuingReality Effect

Gunning alternatively argues that digital photography, the process of encoding data about light in a matrix of numbers, is indexically determined by objects outside of the camera like chemical photography [Gunning, "op. cit.", p.40] .

Likewise, Martin Lister claims that even with a digital camera, “the images produced are rendered photo-realistic, they borrow photographys currency, its deeply historicalreality effect’, simply in order to have meaning” [Lister, "op. cit.", p.252] .

Criticism of theTruth Claim

Sontag challenges thepresumption of veracityassociated with photographs, arguing that they areas much an interpretation of the world as paintings and drawings are”. She describes the role of the photographer in determining the exposure, light, texture and geometry of a photograph [Sontag, "op. cit.", p.6-7] . Gunning points to the physicality of the camera as a mediator between the photograph and reality. He states notes that the use of a lens, film, a particular exposure, kind of shutter, and developing processbecome magically whisked away of one considers the photograph as a direct imprint of reality” [Gunning, "op. cit.", p.40] . Sontag also describes the inability of a photograph to capture enough information about its subject to be considered a representation of reality. She states, “the cameras rendering of reality must always hide more than it disclosesonly what which narrates can make us understand” [Sontag, "op. cit.", p.23] .

Further, Roland Barthes notes that the human subject can be made less real through the process of being photographed. He notes, “once I feel myself observed by the lens, everything changes: I constitute myself in the process ofposing’, I instantaneously make another body for myself, transform myself in advance into an image” [Roland Barthes, "Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography" (London: J. Cape, 1982,c1981), p.10-11] .

References


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