L’atelier du regard

Abstract : Visual sociology could benefit by taking a closer look at the world of drawings and engravings and not just photography or cinema. By so doing, it would make the graphic world more accessible to a wider audience and turn it into a real space for discovery and knowledge. This is the ambiti...

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Main Author: Olivier Ihl
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: La Nouvelle Revue du Travail 2017-06-01
Series:La Nouvelle Revue du Travail
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/nrt/3129
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spelling doaj-e593e688b749450b9ff06fb10d2f0f762020-11-24T23:52:09ZfraLa Nouvelle Revue du TravailLa Nouvelle Revue du Travail2263-89892017-06-011010.4000/nrt.3129L’atelier du regardOlivier IhlAbstract : Visual sociology could benefit by taking a closer look at the world of drawings and engravings and not just photography or cinema. By so doing, it would make the graphic world more accessible to a wider audience and turn it into a real space for discovery and knowledge. This is the ambition underlying the present article, which focuses on images of a particular kind and notably the way in which some of the transformations affecting Paris in the 19th century were captured and depicted. Entitled Madame, madame, un sous-jupe à vendre (“Lingerie for sale”), a caricature drawn by Louis Marie Bosredon (1815-1881) is viewed here as a vehicle for revealing social and urban change. Drawn by a working class artist who was a supporter of the socialist Charles Fourier, it was first published in 1857. The research method used here deviates from any strict distinction between art and science in such a ways as to transform working class drawings into fully-fledged vehicles for participant observation.http://journals.openedition.org/nrt/3129visual sociologyworking class artParis19th century
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olivier Ihl
spellingShingle Olivier Ihl
L’atelier du regard
La Nouvelle Revue du Travail
visual sociology
working class art
Paris
19th century
author_facet Olivier Ihl
author_sort Olivier Ihl
title L’atelier du regard
title_short L’atelier du regard
title_full L’atelier du regard
title_fullStr L’atelier du regard
title_full_unstemmed L’atelier du regard
title_sort l’atelier du regard
publisher La Nouvelle Revue du Travail
series La Nouvelle Revue du Travail
issn 2263-8989
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract : Visual sociology could benefit by taking a closer look at the world of drawings and engravings and not just photography or cinema. By so doing, it would make the graphic world more accessible to a wider audience and turn it into a real space for discovery and knowledge. This is the ambition underlying the present article, which focuses on images of a particular kind and notably the way in which some of the transformations affecting Paris in the 19th century were captured and depicted. Entitled Madame, madame, un sous-jupe à vendre (“Lingerie for sale”), a caricature drawn by Louis Marie Bosredon (1815-1881) is viewed here as a vehicle for revealing social and urban change. Drawn by a working class artist who was a supporter of the socialist Charles Fourier, it was first published in 1857. The research method used here deviates from any strict distinction between art and science in such a ways as to transform working class drawings into fully-fledged vehicles for participant observation.
topic visual sociology
working class art
Paris
19th century
url http://journals.openedition.org/nrt/3129
work_keys_str_mv AT olivierihl latelierduregard
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