Writing with Light http://www.writingwithlight.org Photography • Ethnography • Design Wed, 13 Mar 2024 16:23:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 214983789 Issue no.2 http://www.writingwithlight.org/2023/11/15/issue-no-2/ Wed, 15 Nov 2023 02:43:05 +0000 http://www.writingwithlight.org/?p=343 The View From Above

This second issue of the Writing with Light Magazine continues our exploration of a single theme through the shared fascinations and frustrations of photography, ethnography, and design. The View From Above began in 2018 at a workshop funded by the Wenner Gren Foundation, held in Austin, Texas. At that time collective member, Mark R. Westmoreland presented work that he and a Ghanaian collaborator, Nii Obodai, had undertaken with kite aerial photography. Mark spoke eloquently about the project and demonstrated a savvy approach to the ways in which the kite/camera assemblage broke conventions of photographic framing. Returning to those themes in this issue, we reached out to the anthropologist Alexandrine Boudreault-Fournier, who had just published her 2021 book, Aerial Imagination in Cuba: Stories from Above the Rooftops. Alexandrine offered us our second photo essay – a collaboration with Cuban poet Demián Rabileiro.

We began with the idea of focusing on landscape photography for our second issue. Over time we shifted toward aerial photography and the captivating set of relations and concepts animated by the so-called ‘vertical gaze.’ Our theme is still interested in landscapes and how the horizon line may or may not come into that equation, but by shifting to ‘the view from above’ we’ve tried to open up a space—materially and figuratively—to think more about the limits and politics of verticality and the associated ways in which perspectives and relations can be assembled and reassembled through the still image.

The two longer photo essays in this issue are complemented by an extended section of the magazine that we’ve dubbed Dynamic Range. It brings together a set of creative and critical works that offer variations on the View from Above; experimenting with the forms a photo essay might take, these interventions activate the zones where sequence, design, and analysis intersect. The spreads provide an introduction to the work of various photographers, anthropologists, and artists. Rather than aiming for exhaustive coverage, these distinct viewpoints share fascination with the undisciplined representational potential of aerial images.

The map insert at the center of the issue constitutes its own section. The affordance of an unstapled magazine inspired us to create what we have playfully referred to as our ‘centerfold.’ The folding in this case does not fold out but rather features a landscape that folds inwards and onto itself. One side of the centerfold is a hand drawn map by members of the Institute of Cartopology. The other side features instructions to turn the centerfold into a single-sheet zine by Mark R. Westmoreland. This intervention—at once graphic and material—embodies the very spirit of Writing with Light Magazine, where we celebrate experimentations in form and design that make it possible to re-imagine and re-invent the photo essay at a time when we need more spaces for critical, innovative image-driven scholarship that allows us to think about what it is that images do in a changing world.

Writing with Light Magazine, Issue no.2 The View From Above, is published both digitally and as a limited-run print edition. Our digital edition is published in partnership with the Institute for Community Engaged Research (ICER) Press.

Click here to download a free PDF version of the Magazine.

To order a print edition of the magazine, send a request by email or by using the postal system. The cost of the print magazine is $20 USD plus shipping. We accept cheque, cash, or Venmo payment made out to Craig Campbell. Our magazine is printed in high-quality digital color on 80gsm bright recycled paper stock. The images are crisp and true.

Send email requests to: craig.campbell@utexas.edu.

Send mail requests to:

Craig Campbell
Department of Anthropology
University of Texas at Austin
2201 Speedway Stop C3200
Austin TX 78712

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Issue no.1 http://www.writingwithlight.org/2022/02/07/issue-no-1/ Mon, 07 Feb 2022 00:01:21 +0000 http://www.writingwithlight.org/?p=1 Photography & Forensics

The first issue of Writing with Light Magazine is thematically focused on forensic photography in the aftermath of state violence. It features the work of four different photographers and follows a conversation between Guatemalan anthropologist and media-maker Alejandro M. Flores Aguilar and WwL Collective members Craig Campbell and Lee Douglas. As a point of departure, the conversation then turns to contributions from photographers working in other contexts. Àlvaro Minguito and Clemente Bernad present a co-authored photo essay resulting from ongoing exchanges about the roles of images in contemporary Spain, where exhumations are not officially recognized by courts of law and images play an important role in evidencing violence exercised by the Franco regime.

Next, Argentine photographer Gustavo Germano, in a collaboration with graphic designer Vanina de Monte, narrates the search for his disappeared brother’s remains. The photo essay is accompanied by a text, authored by Drs. Natalia Fortuny and Jordana Blejmar, that describes Germano’s potent project where his visual work pieces together clues and information gathered over thirty years.

You can purchase the print-edition of the magazine or, at no cost, download the magazine as an open access PDF. Read on below for more details.

Download the magazine as an open access PDF

Writing with Light Magazine, Issue no.1 Photography & Forensics, is published both digitally and as a limited-run print edition. Our digital edition is published in partnership with the Institute for Community Engaged Research (ICER) Press.

Click here to download

Our limited-run print magazine is now sold out

The print edition of the magazine is sold out. You can still download it for free, though. Thank you to everyone who purchased a copy from us.

To order a print edition of the magazine, send a request by email or by using the postal system. The cost of the print magazine is $20 USD. We accept cheque, cash, or Venmo payment made out to Craig Campbell. ($20 total, no additional cost for shipping).

Our fifty-six page magazine is printed in high-quality digital color on 55 gsm improved paper stock. The images are crisp and true.

>>Send email requests to: craig.campbell@utexas.edu.

>>Venmo Payments: @Craig-Campbell-70026
Last 4 digits of my phone number: 3972

>>Send mail requests to:

Craig Campbell
Department of Anthropology
University of Texas at Austin
2201 Speedway Stop C3200
Austin TX 78712

A photograph featuring the cover of the writing with light magazine, January 2022.

Writing with Light is a not-for-profit publishing collective. The cost of the magazines is priced to recuperate some of the expenses. There are no profits associated with this project.

A photograph featuring an open spread from the writing with light magazine, January 2022.
Writing with Light, Issue no. 1 Photography & Forensics is published in collaboration with the Institute for Community Engaged Research (ICER) Press at the University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus.

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Profile: Alejandro http://www.writingwithlight.org/2022/02/05/alejandro-m-flores-aguilar/ Sat, 05 Feb 2022 14:01:08 +0000 http://www.writingwithlight.org/?p=243 Alejandro M. Flores Aguilar

We built upon the idea of carrying out a conversation to explore the connections between visual and collaborative methods, activism and politics of resistance in the aftermath of the Counterinsurgency and Cold-War in Guatemala—as well as the rest of Latin America and Spain. The kind of work promoted by the WwL Collective is unique, and it has allowed me to know better the viewpoint of colleagues that grasp the complexity of visual anthropology in contemporary ethnographic work. It has been priceless to have the opportunity to discuss your own work, to share questions and insecurities in an open space of friendship as well as epistemic and aesthetic curiosity. The end result, I think, is the promotion of collective visual and theoretical practices that can contribute in a positive fashion to the subdiscipline.

Photograph of Alejandro Flores
Alejandro M. Flores Aguilar

Alejandro holds a Diplom soziologe (sociology) degree from the Freie Universität Berlin and a PhD in sociocultural anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin. He is a postdoctoral fellow in the CSMCH-IASH, at the University of Edinburg.

His current project—Raised Gaze in Ixil Time: Towards a Minor History of War—revolves around the production of an ethnographic film-essay, and a hypertextual, multimedia memorial repertoire composed of video portraits—life stories of Maya-Ixil former guerrillas. This project has been supported by the Wenner-Gren’s Fejos Postdoc in Ethnographic Film.

His research interests include transdisciplinary, decolonial, collaborative research methods, sensorial and visual anthropology of memory, social imaginaries, Cold War, counterinsurgency infrastructures, and indigenous—ontological— subversions. 

People preparing an exhibition for Historia Ixil del Siglo XX.
Alejandro helping to set up an exhibition in Nebaj, Guatemala in connection with the Historia Ixil del Siglo XX.
Photo by Daniel Perera, 2016. From Writing with Light Magazine, Issue no.1.
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