Please edit this bibliography in MLA format and elucidate any paragraphs related to the thesis in the annotated bibliography section. The abstract and thesis are below for reference. 12 font Times New Roman double-spaced.
Abstract
In this dissertation,
I examine how Black individuals have been historically represented
and perceived through the medium of photography. I investigate the concept of a
Black photographic gaze—a way of observing with a questioning eye—through its
relationship to both individual and collective consciousness. In so doing, I
explore a key question: how does African American photography reveal trauma and
purification? Drawing on the
discourse of the optical unconscious, my analysis focuses on the violence that
is left to the viewer’s imagination. It uses phenomenological hermeneutics to
create an interpretive translation of transhistorical African American
photography of present and absent trauma and power. This method yields ambivalent
perspectives that I call a purgatory of Black consciousness. Although Black
individuals look to the camera as a space of purification and imagination, photography
historically pictured the trauma and suffering of Black individuals. I argue
that viewing these images places Blacks in a “hold” within their consciousness
and lived experience. I draw on what I call photographic hermeneutic
consciousness to interpret the meaning of an image in relation to the
unconscious and collective consciousness evident in the photograph, a
methodology that calls for a new way of interpreting an image that seeks to
examine Black consciousness. Phenomenology alone falls short of this goal. Hermeneutics
allows one to transcend that descriptive phenomenology into a meaning specific
to one’s life. This contrasts with the universal truth that science aims for
through pure perception.
Keywords: Purgatory, Black Consciousness, African
American Photography, Trauma, Recognition
As a visual representation, a photograph captures a specific moment in time and space. It extends beyond what the human eye can see. In this thesis, I focus on the phenomenological representation of African American trauma as reinterpreted through the lenses of Black photographers. More specifically, my research advocates for alternative ways of viewing and interpreting images. The topic of my dissertation is thus Black consciousness as expressed through the photographic process. I explore photography as a model of transhistorical Black aesthetics, affording priority to contemporary philosophical perspectives within the discourse of ongoing violence and subjugation. My research question is thus as follows: how does African American photography reveal trauma and purification? Additionally, what are the implications of the optical unconsciousness of the Black subject? By examining the subconscious relationship between the photographer and their subject during the contemporary image-making process, I aim to uncover patterns from the past. This facilitates a process of healing and contributes toward enabling one to understand the influence of the unconscious mind on behaviors and lived experiences. My analysis focuses on the unconscious perceptions of both the viewer and the image.
To lay the groundwork for my methodology, the thesis investigates the philosophical genealogy of the photograph. It sheds light on how photography intensifies violence against the Black subject and contributes to an ambivalent understanding of the purgatory of consciousness. In religious contexts, purgatory is a state or place where souls undergo purification or temporary punishment before reaching their ultimate destination. It thus serves as a transitional state between life on Earth and the afterlife. In this research, I question whether the process of creating a photograph allows for such a transitional relationship between reality and imagination. In what ways does photography, viewed as a purification process, reflect the aspirations of early Black photographers and their contemporary counterparts? This concept will be explored further below.
As such, this thesis focuses on transhistorical African American photography. More specifically, it grapples with the reverberations and vestiges of trauma that are often absent yet implied in African American photography, with an emphasis on the violence that is left to the viewer’s imagination. How can photography serve as an archive for tracing these remnants? I argue that these traces, whether they are visible or not, persist within the collective consciousness of Black life, existing within the ongoing violence and traumas of enduring the aftermath of slavery. I further argue that the legacies of slavery continue to shape and haunt contemporary Black existence, a state described by Christina Sharpe as being “in the wake” (page ref.). This phrase refers to being caught in the turbulent and often destructive currents of this historical and ongoing violence. It involves tackling both the past and the present and understanding how historical traumas persist and shape individual and collective experiences. Being “in the wake” thus entails confronting and reckoning with the ongoing impacts of slavery and racism on Black lives and communities.