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Exile through the camera's eye in New YorkWhen the National Socialists came to power, New York became a major city of arrival and a new base for German-speaking photographers. At this time, photography was undergoing a radical transformation as it sought to establish itself as an art form. The émigrés, in turn, brought with them a broad spectrum of professional training and photographic skills. The camera served as a medium for engaging with the metropolis, reflecting on the experience of migration, building networks and simply surviving economically.In order to comprehensively analyse the complex relationships between photography and exile in the context of the metropolis of New York, Helene Roth takes a closer look at the creative achievements and heterogeneous perspectives, but also the setbacks of émigré photographers. From a transnational perspective, she engages with the socio-cultural, political and artistic developments of the 1930s and 1940s.The German edition of 'Urban Eyes' (Wallstein Verlag, 2024) was awarded the Gold Medal in the category 'Photography Theory Textbook' by the jury of the German Photo Book Award 2025/2026. The dissertation on which this monograph is based received the Claus-Dieter Krohn Prize (2024).
Produktinformation
Utgivningsdatum2026-02-18
Mått155 x 233 x undefined mm
Vikt907 g
FormatHäftad
SpråkEngelska
Antal sidor450
FörlagLeuven University Press
ISBN9789462704954
UtmärkelserWinner of Claus-Dieter Krohn Prize 2024 (Germany)
Helene Roth is research assistant at Institute of Art History at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, from which she obtained her PhD in 2024.
Chapter 1. Urban Eyes – An Introduction 1.1 Photography and Exile: State of the Art 1.2 Migrating Material: Archives and Source Material 1.3 Forging the City: Research Question and MethodologiesChapter 2. New York as an “Arrival City” for German-speaking Émigré Photographers in the 1930s and 1940s 2.1 The Camera as a Portable Medium in New York Exile 2.2 Photography in New York in the First Half of the 20th CenturyChapter 3. From Europe to New York : Emigration Routes between Departure, Passage, and Arrival 3.1 Between Europe and New York: Images of Departure as Remembrance 3.2 At Sea, on Board, or on Stopover: Transitory Photographs on the Passages 60 3.3 Me and the Camera: First Pictures in New YorkChapter 4. Camera Actors in the City : Urban Practices in New York Exile 4.1 Footpath, Passers-by, and Facades: Walking and Photographing in Urban Space in New York 4.2 Fast or High Up: Photographing Driving under, through, or over the City 4.3 Window Views: Serial Photography from the ApartmentChapter 5. Printed Photographs : Photobooks and Photo Albums in New York Exile 5.1 Conceiving and Circulating: Exile Publishers as Catalysts for Photobook Publications 5.2 The City as Book: Photobooks of and about New York 5.3 From South to North and East to West: Photonarrative Street and Milieu Studies in the Photobook 5.4 Exploring, Experimenting, and Gluing: The Conception of Photo Albums and Scrapbooks in New YorkChapter 6. Business with Pictures : Photographic Economies in Exile 6.1 Selling Your Pictures: Photo Agencies as Networks and Sources of Income in Exile 6.2 “The World of Tomorrow”: The 1939 World’s Fair in New York as a Pictorial Motif and Commission Opportunity 6.3 Translating and Photographing: Freelance Work for the Museum of Modern Art 6.4 Dance, Theatre, Animals: Female Émigré Photographers’ Photo Studios around Central ParkChapter 7. Photo Experts in Exile : Transcultural Photographic Theories and Practices between Exchange, Teaching, and Mediation 7.1 Exhibiting and Representing: Artistic Photo Discourses at Weyhe Gallery and Norlyst Gallery around 57th Street 7.2 Teaching and Practicing: Photography Courses at the New School for Social Research 7.3 Photography for All: Photographic Theory and Practice through Popular Photography and ManualsChapter 8. Emigration Shapes the City : Photographic Places of Exile in New York 8.1 Transtopia: The Photographic Reappraisal of Emigration in the Ellis Island Internment Camp 8.2 Visualising Placemaking: German-speaking Life around East 86th Street in Yorkville 8.3 In Public, In Private: Intermedial and Transcultural Contact Zones on West 21st Street in Chelsea 8.4 Queering Places: The Portrait Studio as Site of Sexual Orientation and Artistic Practice in ExileChapter 9. Functions of Photography in Exile and for Migration Studies – EpilogueAppendixes I. Biographies of German-speaking Émigré Photographers in New York in the 1930s and 1940s II. Permanent/Freelance German-speaking Emigrant Photographers at Black Star, 1935–1950AcknowledgementsList of AbbreviationsNotesArchivesBibliographyIndex of Persons, Institutions, Magazines, Photobooks, and Neighbourhoods