Picturing Empires: Photography and Social Change in 19th Century Multi-Ethnic Environments

Picturing Empires: Photography and Social Change in 19th Century Multi-Ethnic Environments

Organizer
Universität Basel, Departement Geschichte, Lehrstuhl für Osteuropäische Geschichte, Prof. Dr. Benjamin Schenk, Lenka Fehrenbach, Laura Elias
Venue
Landgut Castelen
Location
Augst (bei Basel)
Country
Switzerland
From - Until
27.08.2014 - 29.08.2014
Deadline
20.08.2014
Website
By
Elias, Laura

The nineteenth century was a century of radical transformation for Europe's multi-ethnic empires. As the “Age of Empires“ saw the continent's major powers embark on an unprecedented rivalry for acquisition and control of new overseas territories, rapid industrialization brought ground-breaking innovations in transportation and communication as well as technological discoveries and scientific progress. Rising nationalism and tremendous social change were other factors that heralded the modern age in Europe's multi-ethnic and multi-confessional empires.
The invention of photography, that concurred with the above-mentioned changes, played a significant role in articulating and shaping the transformation. The new technique, it was claimed, allowed one to capture an “objective” image of the real world. Means of technical reproduction, moreover, offered novel possibilities for circulating visual representations of the world in newspapers and journals or on postcards. Even if we know today that pictures cannot mimetically depict reality, the evolution of photography fundamentally altered the ways people were viewing the world during the nineteenth century. Thus the main question of our workshop is how photography effected visual representations and people's imagination of imperial society and space.
Our project starts with the observation that the socio-economic and cultural changes during the nineteenth century – industrialization, new methods of rule, differentiation of natural, social and humane scientific disciplines – went along with the evolution and rapid spread of photography. Looking at multi-ethnic empires in a comparative perspective, the workshop will examine the relationship between social, scientific, and technological changes on the one hand and the development of photography on the other. Research currently conducted at the University of Basel on ethnographic and industrial photography in the Russian Empire raised questions and hypotheses that shall be discussed in the workshop and compared to similar studies and works on other empires. In addition to ethnographic and industrial photography, we would also like to discuss images of imperial subjects as well as photographic representations of religious and confessional diversity. Finally, in a diachronic perspective, the workshop will discuss the changes in visual representation of imperial society and space before and after the invention of photography. The purpose of the workshop is to establish a forum via which to examine and debate methods of historical analysis and interpretation of visual representations, in particular photographs. We will also discuss the possibilities as well as the limitations of visual historical sources.

The workshop will take place at the Landgut Castelen, a 19th century-industrial villa, charmingly located near the illustrious Augusta Raurica at Augst (fifteen minutes away by train from the city of Basel/Switzerland).

Programm

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

9.30 – 10.00 Arrival

10.00 – 10.30 Introduction
Prof. Dr. Benjamin Schenk, Laura Elias, Lenka Fehrenbach M.A.

10.30 – 13.00
Panel I: Visual Representations before and after the Invention of Photography

Prof. Dr. Elena A. Vishlenkova, Moscow: To Invent or Minute: Ethnic and Spatial Images of the Pre-photographical Epoch

Dr. Heather S. Sonntag, Madison: Albums as Visual Technologies of Empire: Kaufman's "Turkestan Album" and Napoleon's "Description of Egypt"

Prof. Dr. James Ryan, Exeter: Imperial Landscape: Exploring the British Empire with and without the camera

Comment: Prof. Dr. Mark Bassin, Stockholm

13.00 – 14.30 Lunch

14.30 – 17.00
Panel II: Picturing Imperial Subjects in the Age of Photography

Dr. Lorena Rizzo, Bielefeld: An-aesthetics of the Prison: the Breakwater Prison Albums, 1880s to 1900s.

Olga Annanurova, Moscow: Seeing Empire to its Full Extent: Subject in and Beyond Zakhar Vinogradov's Stereophotographs

Comment: Dr. Andreas Broeckmann, Lüneburg

17.00 – 17.30 Coffee Break

17.30 – 19.00
Keynote Address
Prof. Dr. Ronald Grigor Suny, Michigan: Modernizing Empires: Maintaining the Imperial in the Age of Nations.

19.30 Dinner: Landgut Castelen

Thursday, August 28, 2014

10.00 – 12.30
Panel III: Visualizing Multiethnicity

Laura Elias, Basel: Picturing "Russia’s Orient" – Visual Representations of Multiethnicity in Late Imperial Russia

Baiba Tetere, M.A., Greifswald: Looking at Peasants – Hybridized Visions of Rural Life in Latvia, 1860s–1910s

Prof. Dr. Martina Baleva, Basel: The Fabric of Ethnicity. Dress Codes, Trendsetters, and Collective Identities in Ottoman-Era Photography

Comment: Prof. Dr. Elizabeth Edwards, Leicester

12.30 – 14.00 Lunch

14.00 – 17.00
Panel IV: Visualizing Religious Diversity

Prof. Dr. Eugene M. Avrutin, Illinois: Photographing the Jewish Pale of Settlement

Jennifer Keating, M.A., London: Composing Belief: Religion, Diversity and Landscape in Russian Central Asia, 1881–1914

Dr. Jürg Schneider, Basel: The Photographs cannot Speak for Themselves. Visual Representations of Colonial Space in West and Central Africa

Comment: Prof. Dr. Arno Schubbach, Basel

19.00 Uhr Dinner: Restaurant Latini, Basel

Friday, August 29, 2014

9.15 – 11.45
Panel V: Industrial Photography

Lenka Fehrenbach, M.A., Basel: Visible Success: The Visual Construction of Corporate History in Russian Commemorative Publications

Dr. Céline Assegond, Tours: The Beginning of Industrial Photography in France: Which Representations of the Working Environment do we find? (1850–1915)

Noeme Santana, M.A., Leicester: The S. Pearson & Son Photographic Archive: Corporate Image and Industrial Photography, 1880–1930

Comment: Prof. Dr. Monika Dommann, Zurich

11.45 – 12.00 Coffee Break

12.00 – 13.00 Concluding Discussion Prof. Dr. Benjamin Schenk, Basel

Contact (announcement)

Laura Elias

Uni Basel, Departement Geschichte, Lehrstuhl für Osteurop. Geschichte, Hirschgässlein 21, 4051 Basel

+41612702238

laura.elias@unibas.ch


Editors Information
Published on
01.08.2014
Author(s)
Contributor
Classification
Temporal Classification
Regional Classification
Additional Informations
Country Event
Language(s) of event
English
Language of announcement