ABSTRACT

With increasingly accessible camera technology, crowdsourced public media projects abound like never before. Such projects often seek to secure a snapshot of a single day in order to establish communities and create visual time capsules for the future. Mass Photography: Collective Histories of Everyday Life assesses the potential of these popular moment-in-time projects by examining their current day prevalence and their historical predecessors. Through archival research and interviews with organisers and participants, it examines, for the first time, the vast photographic collections resulting from such projects, analysing their structures and systems, their aims and objectives, and their claims and promises. The central case study is the 55,000 photographs submitted to One Day for Life in 1987, which aimed, in its own time, to be ‘the biggest photographic event the world had ever seen’.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Approaching Mass Photography: Methods, Models and Debates

chapter 1|14 pages

Days in the Life

From Mass Observation to Crowdsourcing

chapter 2|32 pages

One Day for Life

Charity, Competition, Archive

chapter 3|23 pages

Everyday Life and Ordinary Photography

Documentary Hopes and Expectations

chapter 4|28 pages

Scale and Monumentality

Collective Identity and Imagined Community

chapter 5|32 pages

Humanism and Compassion

Photographic Democracy and Emotional Affect

chapter 6|39 pages

Competitive Aesthetics

Art, Amateurism and Ambition

chapter 7|23 pages

Visual Time Capsules

Photographic Memory and Historical Desire

chapter 8|12 pages

Conclusion

Legacies, Promises and Potential