Newest Posts

End Notes and Schedule of pickup

Hey all.  I wanted to thank you for an engaging class this autumn.  You provided me with a nice welcome to Texas and an encouraging introduction to the intellectual and creative potential of UT students.  I hope you have a great break!

Your final projects can be picked up after 11am Noon (sorry I’m having bike trouble) on Tuesday, Dec. 15 from the main office in Anthropology department during regular office hours (Monday to Friday between 8-11:59am and 1-4:30pm).  They’ll be in a clearly marked box.

~Craig

2009_xmas-card_generic-small

Crit and questions

Wednesday December 9th between 1 and 2pm I’ll be in class to consult with you on your final projects.  If enough people show up, we’ll be able to workshop your half-made projects, half-baked ideas, or even your practically-fully-formed-and-nearly-ready-to-hand-in works.  As always I encourage you to email me if you have questions.  I can also arrange for individual consultations if you are unable to come to class on the 9th.

-Craig

Final Assignment

Final project is due: Friday, December 11 by 4:30 pm.

I will be holding an informal crit and workshop on the afternoon of Wednesday, December 9th.  1-2pm in our usual class room.

ant325_Finalproject

Schedule update

Here is the schedule update:

Nov. 12 Thursday

Taussig, Michael (2003) “The Diary as Witness: An anthropologist writes what he must,” The Chronicle Review. Dec. 19, 2003.

Minor scrapbook #1

Nov. 17 Tuesday

Highmore, Ch. 9. Postcript: Everyday life and the future of cultural studies.

Major scrapbook proposal

Nov. 19 Thursday

Sontag, Susan “Regarding the torture of others”

Nov. 24 Tuesday

Minor scrapbook #2

Dec. 9 Wednesday:

Friday, December 11: Final papers must be in.

Major scrapbook is due today by 4:30pm in the Anthropology main office (EPS 1.130).  Do not place assignments under my door.  I will also not be accepting late assignments, as I have no flexibility in the date by which I need to submit your grades.

Miscellaneous new links

Anne suggest some great links for upcoming events

  • The local darkroom coop is having their annual show on Friday, November 13 (6:30 -9) at the Pearl Street Coop
  • This weekend and next is the east austin studio tour.  There are a couple photographers opening up their spaces and a few galleries have photography hung right now.  Bikes recommended.

Hannah sent this one in last week (sorry I forgot to post it!)

Scrapbook assignment #1

The American scrapbook at a cultural form

Scrapbooks are, as Katriel and Farrel write, “an established mode of self-narration” in mainstream American culture.  In our exploration of the photographic image and the everyday we need to consider how people use photographs—not photographers, not magazine layout artists, but real honest to goodness pie eating, tea-bagging Americans.  The memorialization of events through the scrapbook form is an important cultural production in America.  It is an art of memory and an art of self-narration that is often overlooked and/or undervalued.

For your first minor scrapbook assignment you are asked to create a two to three page formal scrapbook entry that documents an event.  Your task is to explore the form of the contemporary scrapbook through an engagement with it.  The scrapbook needs to foreground photography in the scrapbook but it needs also to consider the larger ecology of the scrapbook.  You can use photographs from an event that has already passed or you can document a specific event.

You should include a typed metacommentary (200-500 words) that briefly discusses the project in terms of Katriel and Farrel’s article and explains your approach to the aesthetic organization of the scrapbook.

Simplified:

  • Complete a conventional scrapbook entry (2-3 pages)
    • This means baubles and beads, fancy paper and ribbons.
    • Make sure the pages are protected (either in a book or in some protective enclosure).
    • The scrapbook needs to self-aware and self-critical.  You’re doing a scrapbook at the same time as critiquing it.
    • Due. November 12th.

My Parents were awesome

As we move towards presentation, archive, and memory, I thought it would be a good time to look at the website: My Parents Were Awesome.

He was awesome!!

He was awesome!!

New reading . . . (Due November 3rd).

This is the first article that we’ll be looking at as we transition from street photography to collecting photography and arts of memory.  Please look at this by November 3rd.

Katriel, Tamar, and Thomas Farrell. 1991. Scrapbooks as Cultural Texts: An American Art of Memory. Text & Performance Quarterly 11, no. 1: 1.

katriel-farrel1991

Google maps FUBAR

I went over this quickly in class, so you’re forgiven if you didn’t catch it.  When you want to put your images up on google maps, you have to have them on the web first.  If you don’t have any way of getting them up then you should use the google “Picasa Web Albums” which you have access to now that you have a google account.  Upload your pictures to the Picasa Web Albums.

  • On google maps (when you’re editing) you can select the option to add a description to a place marker in plain text, rich text, or html.  In rich text  you are given the option to link an image.  All you do is click on the image icon and it asks for the image url.
  • You get this url by going to the Picasa Web Albums page and right-clicking on the image.  In Firefox you get a drop down menu that gives you the option of “copy image location”.  This is what you want to do.  You then paste that information (the unique address or URL of the image) into the field on the google maps website.
  • Note: for some odd reason the URL you get when you click “Link to this photo” in Picasaweb doesn’t work.  I don’t know why that is but it is the case.  Trust me, don’t do it.

Photo study #3-4 [new deadline]

Because of unrelenting and brutal student pressure (in addition to bureaucratic malfeasance, acts of soldiering and industrial wrecking) the new deadline for photo study #3-4 is now THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22nd.

-The management would like to apologize for any confusion.