Photograph’s Three Objects
There is a new and interesting post on Phenomenoloy And Photography. Please click the link to go there. Or click the image.
October 29, 2010 Posted by Knut Skjaerven | phenomenology | barebones communication, Edmund Husserl, Husserl, Knut Skjaerven, phenomenology and photography, photography, photography and phenomenology | Leave a Comment
Handbook of Phenomenological Aesthetics.
There is a new post on Phenomenology and Photography. It is about a new book from German Springer: Handbook of Phenomenological Aesthetics. An impressive work. Click image to go there.
Enjoy.
September 6, 2010 Posted by Knut Skjaerven | barebones communication | aesthetics, barebones communication, Handbook of Phenomenological Aesthetics, Hans Rainer Sepp, Knut Skjærven, Lester Embree, phenomenology, phenomenology and photography | Leave a Comment
Barthes on Studium and Punctum
You may have noticed that there is a new post on Phenomenology and Photography. Click the link, or click the picture above to go there. The post is about what Barthes actually meant with the terms studium and punctum applied to photography. You will find the answers in that post.
Enjoy.
August 19, 2010 Posted by Knut Skjaerven | barebones communication | barebones communication, phenomenology, phenomenology and photography, punctum, Roland Barthes, Roland Barthes on Photography, studium, studium and punctum | Leave a Comment
Kairos – Phenomenology and Photography.
I can’t say much about this book yet. Other than it is here. I got a mail from Zeta Books yesterday, and they told me so.
I wrote to the author Chan-fai Cheung, Dr. Phil.. Besides being a keen photographer and a teacher of phenomenology, he also is Professor and Chairman, Department of Philosophy, at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. Among many other things.
One review copy is in the post to me from Hong Kong, and I really look forward to reading and reviewing it. I already downloaded an ebook version, but that will never be the same, will it?
Stay tuned for a review, and probably much more on this book. Oh, Kairos is an old Greek word, and it basically means “decisive moment”.
Have a good day.
……………………
For full information about the book, please go here.
June 9, 2010 Posted by Knut Skjaerven | barebones communication, phenomenology, photography | barebones, barebones communication, Chan-fai Cheung, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Department of Philosophy, Knut Skjaerven, Knut Skjærven, phenomenology, phenomenology and photography, photography, Zeta Books | Leave a Comment
phenomenology and photography
I have to admit that I had no clear idea of this from the beginning.
I have thousands of pictures and I have hundreds of books. So, my idea was initially to use both sources in combination on this blog.I started using pictures, because I thought they would brighten, and break up the blog a bit, and maybe, in some cases, make good illustrations for the verbal points made in the individual posts. Particularly in illustrating some of the gestalt factors the pictures came in handy, since some of them seemed to have been shot for the particular blog post.
Not so. The pictures you find on the blog are in some cases taken many years before a blog on barebones communication came to my mind about a year ago. My favourite post, in this respect, is the one on gestalt direction. Go look it up. The post “Wertheimer would have loved it”. This post, by the way, is one of the posts with the most hits. So, I must have done something right.
As I am the photographer of all the pictures posted, so far, I don’t have to worry about copyrights, since I hold copyrights to all the pictures. It makes life much easier that way, since I am allowed to quote from texts, but I am not allowed to quote from visual material in the same way. I can’t just post somebody else’s pictures.
However, lately, the thought grew on me that maybe my pictures had another role to play, as well. You are probably aware that, for instance, Roland Barthes have written with passion about photography. I am referring to his last book: La Chambre Claire, first published in France in 1980, the year of his untimely death.
I will return to that book in later post, since I fully agree with those stating that this book is one of the most important statements ever made on photography.
But what is more, it constitutes a cross section between semiology and phenomenology (Barthes explicitly refers to Edmund Hussels. Barthes states on page 20 in my copy of the English translation: Camera Lucida, that “In this investigation of Photography, I borrowed something from phenomenology’s project and something from its language”.
Barthes is talking about Edmund Husserl as his inpiration.
There is, however, even a much more important issue at stake here. You know that the phenomenological method includes a “freezing”, a “bracketing” of the natural attitude to be able to describe, and to study it more closely. Maybe you also are aware that one of the key methodological notions within phenomenology is the notion “perspective”.
Question: What is it I do, what is it that every photographer does, when taking or shooting pictures? Answer: Could be phrased this way: I/they/we, as photographers, freeze parts of the world from a certain perspective. That is the very nature of photography.
So, the cross over from photography to phenomenology, is rather obvious to make.
As the blog progressed, it slowly dawned on me, that here is a story that never has been told. I will try to tell it, bit by bit, as the blog unfolds. That was the general idea, anyway.
Think about this idea, and take a look at the picture submitted below: A moment, frozen in time, from a certain perspective. Phenomenological investigation illustrated. Photography on phenomenology. Feel free to re-read the posts on the phenomenological method already posted.
Gassin, France, 2002.
All the best to you as well
For more on the books mentioned, please go here: Library Thing: Roland Barthes: La Chambre Claire, and Library Thing: Roland Barthes: Camera Lucida (translated by Richard Howard).
For more posts on Barthes on this blog, go here, or use the tag cloud for navigation.
November 24, 2008 Posted by Knut Skjaerven | gestalt factor direction, image, phenomenology, photography, semiology | Add new tag, Camera Lucida, communication process, France, Gassin, gestalt factor, gestalt factor direction, Gestalt Factors, image, Knut Skjærven, Knut Skjærven on Photography, La Chambre Claire, phenomenological method, phenomenology, phenomenology and photography, photography, photography and phenomenology, Roland Barthes, Roland Barthes on Photography | Leave a Comment
About
Barebones Communication started in December 2007.
The idea was to make a blog about communication combining different resources like phenomenology, semiology, gestalt psychology, etcetera, and to show that different orientations worked well together.
I started adding a photograph to each post, and gradually the blog became oriented towards photography as an expression of visual communication.
In 2010 I made a blog solely based on photography. It became Berlin Black And White. Today is holds 470 images. The same month I started Phenomenology and Photography, as I found that was a particularly interesting area and one that there was scarcely any attention on.
I became interested in street photography and decided to develop that area in a living combination of photography and photographic theory. That is what I still do.
Barebones Communication became the mother blog for a series of specialized blogs as well as several social groups.
I call it THE BAREBONES PROJECT since everything is so closely linked to the inspiration you find in this blog. All of it has to do with phenomenology. Not in any scholarly fashion, but as the craft of photography. More specifically S T R E E T P H O T O G R A P H Y. I find that this type of spontaneous and documentary photography have a special kinship with phenomenology’s L I F E W O R L D.
I would like to think that I, as a photographer, E X E C U T E phenomenology. To me a mere scholarly interest in phenomenology can never be enough to fulfill the original intentions of phenomenology as, first and foremost, a practical, living philosophy. Phenomenology is not for reading. It is for D O I N G.
If you have an interest in how the theoretical platform are being developed into practical guidelines for street photography, you are welcome to follow the ongoing projects. I would be honoured if you did.
You will find all the activities listed in the link section of The Raw Material. I will keep it up to date.
Good luck with it.
Copenhagen, March 10, 2012.
Yes, I am impressed. Barebones Communication has largely been left unattended since mid 2010. It still runs incredibly well. The average views in 2111 were 68 a day, the same as in 2009. The most views on a single day were February 13, 2012 with 435 view.
Many thanks to all those who persistently use this blog. With this new introduction you have an opportunity to follow the many branches that has grown from it. Barebones Communication is still very much alive even if more goes on the sites that have sprung from it.
This year Barebones Communication with turn 100.000 visitors.
I really like your Venn representation of phenomenology
Hi
My name is Mary Edwards and I’m a doctoral student at the University of Florida studying educational technology. My cohort of doctoral students is creating resources pages using google groups and I’m designing a page about phenomenology and the phenomenological approach to research.
I really like your venn representation of phenomenology and request permission to add it to my page (image attached as a bitmap for your reference). Our google group site is limited to Ed Tech doc students and requires an administratively distributed password.
Thanks for your consideration.
Mary
Mary Edwards, MLIS
barebones’ Venn diagram
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Phenomenology The Method
- 1.1 investigating particular phenomena (intuiting)
- 1.2 investigating particular phenomena (analyzing)
- 1.3 investigating particular phenomena (describing)
- 2. investigating general relationships
- 3. apprehending essential relationships
- 4. watching modes of appearing
- 5. exploring phenomena in consciousness
- 6. suspending belief in existence
- 7. interpreting concealed meanings
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