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We must stop thinking photographs depict reality
We must stop thinking photographs depict reality

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When we snap a photograph, we think we’ve captured a moment in time, in reality. It is this experience that inspired Susan Sontag’s ‘ecology of images’, in her seminal essay ‘On Photography’. But philosopher Peter Szendy argues that to organise . . .

When we snap a photograph, we think we’ve captured a moment in time, in reality. It is this experience that inspired Susan Sontag’s ‘ecology of images’, in her seminal essay ‘On Photography’. But philosopher Peter Szendy argues that to organise pictures, photographs and images into a system is impossible. Instead, we need to insist on the open-endedness of images. In doing so, we can better understand their relationship to reality. Statistics prior to Covid-19 indicated that there were more than three billion images circulating each day on social media. This is equal to hundreds of thousands of images during the time it took you to read this sentence. In 2019, YouTube boasted on its official blog that there were more than 500 hours of video uploaded every minute, equal to 720,000 hours a day, and  the equivalent of more than 80 years worth of video. This is more than a lifetime of images every day. This…

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