Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Following the Footprints of Edward S. Curtis: A Tale of the Vanishing Race
View through CrossRef
In 2007, Marie Clements, a Canadian playwright, was asked to prepare a play about the cultural history of Canada. She decided to write a play about Edward S. Curtis, the author of an epic series of photographic works titled The North American Indian, published between 1900 and 1930. Clements invited to the project Rita Leistner, a Canadian photographer, who was responsible for the graphic aspect of the play. Her task was to recreate the way taken by Curtis while immortalizing scenes from the life of the indigenous peoples. Both artists took a fascinating journey following the footsteps of Curtis documenting today’s presence of the First Nations in the United States and Canada. This article, based on the project of Clements and Leistner, discusses the ambiguity of the medium of photography, one which ‘recreates’the reality and at the same time allows the authors to‘create’ it. It presents three basic themes: the mission and work of Edward S. Curtis; the play titled The Edward Curtis Project: A Modern Picture Story by Marie Clements; and the photographs – prepared by Rita Leistner – which were used in play and then published in the book of the same title. The purpose of this text is to present the project of the Canadian authors in the context of visual sociology and anthropology, and to show the potential of photography as a means of building social discourse and creating a narrative of a specific community. It is founded on the assumption that the artistic project in question – based on (both passive and active) participation of the authors in the everyday life of the community presented in it – becomes a source of valuable research material, which can then be subjected to scientific interpretations.
Uniwersytet Lodzki (University of Lodz)
Title: Following the Footprints of Edward S. Curtis: A Tale of the Vanishing Race
Description:
In 2007, Marie Clements, a Canadian playwright, was asked to prepare a play about the cultural history of Canada.
She decided to write a play about Edward S.
Curtis, the author of an epic series of photographic works titled The North American Indian, published between 1900 and 1930.
Clements invited to the project Rita Leistner, a Canadian photographer, who was responsible for the graphic aspect of the play.
Her task was to recreate the way taken by Curtis while immortalizing scenes from the life of the indigenous peoples.
Both artists took a fascinating journey following the footsteps of Curtis documenting today’s presence of the First Nations in the United States and Canada.
This article, based on the project of Clements and Leistner, discusses the ambiguity of the medium of photography, one which ‘recreates’the reality and at the same time allows the authors to‘create’ it.
It presents three basic themes: the mission and work of Edward S.
Curtis; the play titled The Edward Curtis Project: A Modern Picture Story by Marie Clements; and the photographs – prepared by Rita Leistner – which were used in play and then published in the book of the same title.
The purpose of this text is to present the project of the Canadian authors in the context of visual sociology and anthropology, and to show the potential of photography as a means of building social discourse and creating a narrative of a specific community.
It is founded on the assumption that the artistic project in question – based on (both passive and active) participation of the authors in the everyday life of the community presented in it – becomes a source of valuable research material, which can then be subjected to scientific interpretations.
Related Results
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
Study of geometry footprints origin from the physical modeling data
Study of geometry footprints origin from the physical modeling data
Acquisition footprint is a new concept of seismic noise, which appears in 90s of last century when seismic exploration has carried out in complex area. It was called “Acquisition a...
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Osteopathic medical students’ understanding of race-based medicine
Abstract
Context
Race is a social construct, not a biological or genetic construct, utilized to categorize people based on obser...
Neural Correlates of Infant Attention During Initial Exposure to Own- and Other-Race Faces
Neural Correlates of Infant Attention During Initial Exposure to Own- and Other-Race Faces
Past research has shown that infants raised in a racially homogenous environment demonstrate an advantage for processing own-race faces at the individual level in comparison to oth...
CHARACTERISTIC BEHAVIOR FROM FOOTPRINTS IN THE AṬṬHAKATHĀ-DHAMMAPADA
CHARACTERISTIC BEHAVIOR FROM FOOTPRINTS IN THE AṬṬHAKATHĀ-DHAMMAPADA
This article found that Characteristic behavior from footprints as appeared in the Aṭṭhakathā-Dhammapada: the way to look at the characteristic behaviors from the footprints to kno...
Research on Dinoasur Footprints in Zizhou, Shaanxi Province, China
Research on Dinoasur Footprints in Zizhou, Shaanxi Province, China
AbstractIn recent years, the discoveries of dinosaur footprints have been successively reported from Dianshi Town, Zizhou City, Shaanxi Province. The footprints include the tracks ...
Individualistic and morphological characteristics of footprints in a North-West Indian population - Anthropological and forensic implications
Individualistic and morphological characteristics of footprints in a North-West Indian population - Anthropological and forensic implications
Forensic podiatry is considered to be an important
sub-discipline of forensic science, as it can
provide an estimation of the physical attributes
of an unknown individual through p...
REPRODUCTIVE POTENTIALS OF RACES 15B AND 56 OF WHEAT STEM RUST
REPRODUCTIVE POTENTIALS OF RACES 15B AND 56 OF WHEAT STEM RUST
Variations in the prevalence of races 56 and 15B-1 (Can.) of wheat stem rust (Puccinia graminis Pers. f. sp. tritici Erikss. and Henn.) have occurred that cannot be explained by ch...

