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  2. Documentary photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentary_photography

    Documentary photography usually refers to a popular form of photography used to chronicle events or environments both significant and relevant to history and historical events as well as everyday life. It is typically undertaken as professional photojournalism, or real life reportage, but it may also be an amateur, artistic, or academic pursuit.

  3. Social documentary photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_documentary_photography

    Social documentary photography or concerned photography may often be devoted to 'social groups' with socio-economic and cultural similarities, showing living or working conditions perceived as shameful, discriminatory, unjust or harmful. Examples include child labor, child neglect, homelessness, poverty among segments of society, impoverished ...

  4. Photojournalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photojournalism

    Photojournalism is journalism that uses images to tell a news story. It usually only refers to still images, but can also refer to video used in broadcast journalism. Photojournalism is distinguished from other close branches of photography (such as documentary photography, social documentary photography, war photography, street photography and ...

  5. Visual anthropology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_anthropology

    Lists. v. t. e. Visual anthropology is a subfield of social anthropology that is concerned, in part, with the study and production of ethnographic photography, film and, since the mid-1990s, new media. More recently it has been used by historians of science and visual culture. [1] Although sometimes wrongly conflated with ethnographic film ...

  6. Documentary film - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Documentary_film

    Documentary film. A documentary film or documentary is a non-fictional motion picture intended to "document reality, primarily for instruction, education or maintaining a historical record ". [1] Bill Nichols has characterized the documentary in terms of "a filmmaking practice, a cinematic tradition, and mode of audience reception [that remains ...

  7. Humanist photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanist_photography

    Humanist Photography, also known as the School of Humanist Photography, [1] manifests the Enlightenment philosophical system in social documentary practice based on a perception of social change. It emerged in the mid-twentieth-century and is associated most strongly with Europe, particularly France, [2] where the upheavals of the two world ...

  8. Fly on the wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_on_the_wall

    Fly on the wall. A camera up on a wall recording what is happening in the room. Fly on the wall is a style of documentary -making used in film and television production. The name derived from the idea that events are seen candidly, as a fly on a wall might see them. In the purest form of fly-on-the-wall documentary-making, the camera crew works ...

  9. Photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photography

    Photography is the art, application, and practice of creating images by recording light, either electronically by means of an image sensor, or chemically by means of a light-sensitive material such as photographic film. It is employed in many fields of science, manufacturing (e.g., photolithography ), and business, as well as its more direct ...