ABSTRACT

This book delivers an in-depth analysis of Hercule Florence, who is virtually unknown despite being among the world’s photographic pioneers. Based on the texts of various manuscripts, letters, diaries, notes, and advertisements, this book answers numerous questions surrounding Florence’s work, including the materials, methods, and techniques he employed and why it took more than a century for his discovery to come to light. Kossoy’s groundbreaking research establishes Florence’s use of "photographie" to describe the product of his experiments, half a decade before Sir John Herschel recommended "photography" to Henry Fox Talbot. This book aims to change the fact that despite its cultural and historical importance, Florence’s photographic breakthrough remains largely unknown in the English-speaking world.

chapter

Introduction

part I|48 pages

The Brazil of Hercule Florence

chapter 2|5 pages

The Inventor’s Youth

chapter 3|3 pages

His Arrival in Brazil

chapter 4|8 pages

The Langsdorff Expedition

chapter 5|1 pages

Vila de São Carlos

chapter 6|12 pages

First Researches and Discoveries

part II|26 pages

Photography

part III|59 pages

Reconstitution and Confirmation of Florence’s Discovery

chapter 17|31 pages

Written Sources

chapter 18|12 pages

Iconographic Sources

chapter 19|3 pages

Other Sources