User:Mathijs van Oosterhoudt/thesisoutline

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Thesis Outline



Abstract

Cameras influence the possibilities of their result, a result that influences us on a daily basis. Changes, additions and new inventions have changed the camera over time, thereby it's result, and therefor how it influences us.

Those changes are made by people who have control over the development and production of cameras, influenced by various inputs and desires that might contribute to why such changes were made, whether this is in the interest of consumers or not. This means that, to some degree, changes in our perception are dependent on those that have the control of production.

If changes in the technology alters our perception, does it logically follow that by removing, reverting or creating alternatives such changes, we can also get rid or limit it's influence? However, said alternatives and the like are dependent on the understanding of the technology that surround them. Understanding which becomes increasingly difficult as technology advances.

Is it possible to subvert the design choices made by manufacturers of photo cameras?


The history of choices, which choices and by whom?

In the first section I want to take a critical look at the history of the camera, it's players (inventors, manufacturers), how the technology has evolved over time and how these (and other) technologies have been applied to the photo camera. Through a few specific case studies I want to show some cameras or trends in the photo camera that influence us (Fuller), how and why they came to be.

For example, smile detection in current consumer cameras and the move towards implemented 'apps' on cameras (And implemented cameras on other hardware) re-enforced by social media. Just like the lack of technical know-how pre-1900 in the field of lens-making resulted in the creation of soft-focus lenses, influencing pictorialism and photography as art (W.R. Young).


Why is it important to subvert such choices?

In the second section I want to talk about why one would want to subvert such choices. In the case of any technology, the people that control the means of production over the tools hold significant power over how we are able to apply technology, and said technology might be used to, for instance, keep dominant ideologies in place (Winner). By being able to subvert this power we gain control over how we apply technology and possibly therefor gain power from it.

For example, the simplicity of the analog camera's technology allowed people who would otherwise not be able to buy or obtain a camera, use the knowledge of them to make one from scratch, being able to portray their own situations from their point of view, such as the cameras made by people in concentration camps during the second world war, or those made by Miroslav Tichy.



How can technologies be subverted?

In the third chapter, I want to take a look at how the consumer influences both the shaping of the camera as it's adaptation (Kittler), but also the way they can adapt them to their own needs through various ways of tinkering or creation from scratch. What are the possibilities, what are the obstacles? How has this worked in the past, and are the same methods still apply-able to modern day situations?

There are endless way of subverting the photo camera, but in all cases, from firmware hacking, hardware hacking to creating your own entirely, it is the goal and intend to offer alternative applications or different technologies to the photo camera that would have otherwise not been there, thereby disrupting the manufacturer or influencing them.

For example, the trend of hacking the infra-red filter out of the camera resulted in Sigma producing cameras where the infrared filter could be taken out by any user, without the need for hardware hacking. [add less subtle / older example]

Bibliography

Walter Benjamin - Little History of Photography

Langdon Winner - Do Artifacts Have Politics?

Jonathan Crary - Techniques of the observer

Friedrich Kittler - Gramaphone, Film, Typewriter

Matthew Fuller, Andrew Goffey - Towards an Evil Media Studies