Misreading Feuerbach: Susan Sontag, Photography and the Image-World

Attention to Susan Sontag’s (mis)reading of Ludwig Feuerbach’s Essence of Christianity reveals her agenda in On Photography: to depart from ‘the new age of unbelief’ and return to ‘something like the primitive status of images’ in which an image participates in the reality of the object depicted. Fo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sentilles, Sarah (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Oxford University Press 2010
In: Literature and theology
Year: 2010, Volume: 24, Issue: 1, Pages: 38-55
Online Access: Volltext (JSTOR)
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Summary:Attention to Susan Sontag’s (mis)reading of Ludwig Feuerbach’s Essence of Christianity reveals her agenda in On Photography: to depart from ‘the new age of unbelief’ and return to ‘something like the primitive status of images’ in which an image participates in the reality of the object depicted. For Sontag, photography has reduced the world to its image, yet it is photography that can get us back to ‘reality’. Sontag’s project is more similar to Feuerbach’s than she allows. Like Feuerbach, Sontag argues that human beings have mistaken the copy for the thing itself and, as a result, have created a false division between the copy and the ‘real,’ devalued both the copy and the thing itself, and overlooked the profound ways images affect the world.
ISSN:1477-4623
Contains:Enthalten in: Literature and theology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1093/litthe/frp055