Photographs often seem factual—it is a captured moment in
time, a piece of visual evidence that is undeniable. Cultural weight is given
to photographs because they are traces of the real. However, what people often
don’t realize is in the same way that a journalist approaches an article with
his own bias, a photographer approaches a photograph with bias as well, and
that can seriously affect the factuality of an image.
The photographer dictates a lot of what message is being
communicated by an image with the lighting, the angle, the focus, the framing,
the moment he or she chooses to capture. While an image can be pretty strong
evidence of what is true, they cannot always be taken at face value, in the
same way that a piece of writing can not be.
With modern technology, the need to develop a critically eye
for photography is escalated further. PhotoShop has revolutionized the way that
photos can be digitally enhanced or manipulated to portray a desired effect.
Because of this, the photographic truth is put under further scrutiny. There is
no guarantee that a photograph represents unbiased truth.
Sturken and Cartwright suggest in their article "Images, Power, and Politics," that the viewer is responsible for how they view images, and the way that they engage what they are viewing. Assessing photographic truth is "one way that we, as viewers, contribute to the process of assigning value to the culture in which we live." While photographic truth is debatable, we, as viewers, can glean truth and meaning if we are critical of the ideologies that may be at play in an image.
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