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Home > Photography and Photographers of the American Civil War


 

The American Civil War (1861-1865) was the second war caught on camera, the first being the Mexican-American War. It profoundly changed the way wars were covered and viewed. The grandeur and sweetness of an aftermath of a victorious battle that was once up to a painter to portray, all of a sudden became uninterpretable, losing its subjectivity, the true terror of war could not be hidden anymore. Americans for the first time saw the vividly horrific photographs of maimed and dying fellow Americans in agony lowly withering away on a battlefield far away from their homes. Astonishment and shock, not toward the cruelty of war, as much as to the new innovated barbaric weapons of war, left Americans bewildered. Many asked themselves is this not the war that was supposed to last a couple of months or so, what has happened? Newspapers across the land published cadaverous pictures of the worst of humanity. Those scenes of pillage and shame were captured by men like George Bernard , Matthew Brady and many more, thanks to their unselfish and improvising-friendly characters we now can see the American Civil War as it truly was.

1 History of photography

In order, to better comprehend Civil War photography we have to look at the origins of photography itself. In 1827 on one sunny, warm day history was made when after eight hours of industrious work Joseph Nicéphore Niépce developed the first fixed image. However, it was Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre who first simplified the process. After reducing the exposure time to less than thirty minutes, the first permanent photograph was made. This method became known as a daguerreotype, it eventually became popular and by 1850s seventy daguerreotype studios were opened in New York. Just before the start of the Civil War, a more cost efficient practical system of photographing was developed by William Henry Fox Talbot. It was the first system to use the positive-negative process thus making it possible to have more copies of the same picture. A basic camera is a combination of opticsSee also list of optical topics. Optics is a branch of physics that describes the behavior and properties of light and the interaction of light with matter. Optics explains and is illuminated by optical phenomena. The field of optics usually describes the, mechanicsMechanics ( Latin mechanicus from the Greek mechanikos "one skilled in machines") is a variety of specialised sciences pertaining to the functions and routine operations of machines, machine-like devices or objects. When preceded by a qualifier, mechanics and chemical processesChemistry is the science of matter and its interactions with energy (see physics, biology). Because of the diversity of matter (which is mostly atomic), Chemists are often engaged in the pursuit of studying how atoms interact to form molecules, and how mo. It does not need any electricityElectricity is a property of certain subatomic particles, such as electrons and protons, that gives rise to attractive and repulsive forces between them. It is one of the four fundamental forces of nature, and is a conserved property of matter that can be whatsoever to function. The lensA lens is: a part of the eye an optical device that may be used in a camera or in a telescope; see lens (optics). the genus of the lentil a science-fictional alien device in E. Smith's Lensman series, which gives its bearer telepathic and other abilities. is the optical part it is a piece of curved glassFor eyeglasses, see spectacles The physics definition of a glass is a uniform amorphous solid material, usually produced when a suitably viscous molten material cools very rapidly, thereby not giving enough time for a regular crystal lattice to form.. Its job is to catch beams that are bouncing off an object. This is possible because lightLight is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength that is visible to the eye, or in a more general sense, any electromagnetic radiation in the range from infrared to ultraviolet. The three basic dimensions of light (and of all electromagnetic radiation travels slower through glass than through the air. Angle at which the light is entering the lens is also important but not much was known about it at that time. A mechanical part of the camera is the camera itself, which allows light to physically interact with the lens in such a way to make a photograph. The chemical factor concerns the elements that are needed to make all this possible. All put together that is what makes photography possible. If it were not for these early pioneers of photography our concept of our history would have been a little bit different. That is why a writer is obligated to mention their ingenuity whenever he is writing a report on a subject related to their works.



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