Anesthetic Cruft
(Reparation for Events Real and Imagined)
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Started November 19, 2012.
Updates at 5:50 and 11:50 AM & PM EST
Source: Yahoo! Image Search
Selections from the Archive
Created July 02, 2018 at 05:50 PM EST
Created October 05, 2019 at 11:50 PM EST
Created March 09, 2015 at 05:50 AM EST
Created May 04, 2013 at 05:50 AM EST
Created December 01, 2017 at 05:50 PM EST
Further Resources
Needing to have reality confirmed and experience enhanced by photographs is an aesthetic consumerism to which everyone is now addicted. Industrial societies turn their citizens into image–junkies; it is the most irresistible form of mental pollution. Poignant longings for beauty, for an end to probing below the surface, for a redemption and celebration of the body of the world—all these elements of erotic feeling are affirmed in the pleasure we take in photographs. But other, less liberating feelings are expressed as well. It would not be wrong to speak of people having a compulsion to photograph: to turn experience itself into a way of seeing. Ultimately, having an experience becomes identical with taking a photograph of it, and participating in a public event comes more and more to be equivalent to looking at it in photographed form. That most logical of nineteenth-century aesthetes, Mallarmé, said that everything in the world exists in order to end in a book. Today everything exists to end in a photograph.
— On Photography, Susan Sontag