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uprising

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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2016) 7 (1)
Published: 01 October 2016
... into conflict with contemporaneous desires to assign agency to principal players in the Uprising. This conceptual tension resulted in the coexistence of two categories of photographs: those in which individuality and culpability were assigned to specific anti-British agents in the Uprising and typological...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2012) 3 (1)
Published: 01 September 2012
... to History: Chinese-American Tom Leung Supplementary Topic: Armed Revolutionary Uprisings through Pictorial[s] of Current Events From Late Qing Reform to the Revolution: Preparations for Constitutionalism and Railway Nationalism Witness to History: George Ernest Morrison, Reporter from...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2016) 7 (1)
Published: 01 October 2016
.... The album puts photographs of Tresidder’s family and friends together with portraits of Indian leaders — imprisoned and condemned to death — of the 1857 Uprising against British rule. Viswanathan analyzes the ways in which the album asserts the culpability of Indians and the innocent victimhood of Britons...
Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2012) 3 (1)
Published: 01 September 2012
...: the Second Opium War (1856-1860), the Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895), the Boxer Rebellion (1898-1903), the Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905), the Wuchang Uprising (1911), and the Warlord Era (1912-1928). Although the section titles draw attention to dramatic incidents such as wars, rebellions, and revolution...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2011) 2 (1)
Published: 01 September 2011
... on the shift in the representation of China in photographs taken between the Second Opium War (1856–80) and the Boxer Uprising (1900–1901), Sarah Fraser, a historian of Chinese art, shows “the ways in which photographic types referencing ethnographic genres formulated the concept of ‘China’ and developed...
Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2010) 1 (1)
Published: 01 September 2010
..., including the migration of provincial artists to large urban areas in their search for patronage as a result of the” decline in princely culture” in northern India following the anti-British Uprising of 1857. Donald N. Clark, ed., Missionary Photography in Korea: Encountering the West through...
Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2011) 1 (2)
Published: 01 May 2011
..., India that was shot at the time of the Indian Uprising in 1857. AR : At what point were books added to the collection? RA: Publications and books were Mr. Alkazi’s passions always. As his background was in the theatre and earlier in a Jesuit school in Pune, literature was always important...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2011) 1 (2)
Published: 01 May 2011
... brought by art photography through a case study of Pan Dawei (1880 1929). A leading art photographer, talented painter, dramatist, and social refor-mer, Pan is best known for his heroic burial of the revolutionaries who died in the Guangzhou uprising against the Qing Dynasty (1644 1911) in 1911. Among his...
Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2021) 11 (1)
Published: 10 June 2021
... of sending Senegalese soldiers to Indochina to quell the Vietnamese uprising in the mid 20 th century. In distinct ways, both artists mobilize the archive’s capacity to bear witness to the passage of historical time, interrogate it, and to nurture new futures. Figure 3: The American President...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2011) 2 (1)
Published: 01 September 2011
... by President Park, in a wretched karaoke room. JoSeub, again in an unconvincing disguise as Park, is holding the microphone, accompanied by his military compatriots who are ready to join his lead singing with discipline, passion and even flirtation. By representing Park’s military uprising as an act...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2019) 9 (2)
Published: 12 April 2019
... of Oxford. Fig. 5. Nyema Droma, Double portrait of Tenzin Nyendak , London, 2018, 168 x 120 cm each, © Nyema Droma/Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford. In 1959, after an uprising by Tibetans against the Chinese, the 14th Dalai Lama left Lhasa and sought sanctuary in India. Those who...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2016) 6 (2)
Published: 01 April 2016
... in the Walled City’s activities, for doing so would likely results in local uprisings that would, in turn, provoke China and thus lead to long-term Chinese intervention; the British “avoided any action that might raise China’s interest, lest it yield less British influence instead of more.” 14 Meanwhile...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2019) 10 (1)
Published: 18 November 2019
... photographs used for commemoration and in protest, in which instead it is the event of violence that defines the victims — that is, those who died in the uprising on October 14, 1973, the massacre on October 6, 1976, Black May 1992, or the red-shirt crackdown on April 10, 2010. 26 Place is one...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2010) 1 (1)
Published: 01 September 2010
... of California, Berkeley Between the third quarter of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century, a politically charged, trans-Pacific dialogue between the U.S. and China played a significant role in transforming the photographic representation of China. The Opium Wars, Boxer Uprising...
Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2018) 8 (2)
Published: 16 April 2018
..., soldiers can be seen standing guard. 54 The English caption gives the additional information that the photograph was taken at the time of the Fujian Rebellion. 55 During this uprising, which lasted from November 20, 1933, to January 22, 1934, Fujian Province declared its independence from...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2012) 3 (1)
Published: 01 September 2012
... as a martial but caring leader to guerilla fighters of various rural origins, an idea aligned by the editors of the volume with the administration’s focus on peasant uprisings and other forms of resistance. Her recollection of a “family photograph” also adds a perspective of resistance, shedding any notion...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2016) 6 (2)
Published: 01 April 2016
... cultural elites. The fact that corporal-punishment imagery packaged as “Korean customs” dried up during the comparatively lenient period of cultural rule that followed the March 1, 1919, uprisings attests to this hypothesis. In the most violent period of Japanese rule in Taiwan, from June 1895 through...
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Journal Article
Trans Asia Photography (2013) 3 (2)
Published: 01 April 2013
..., thought and society were already under way, it was neither a beginning nor a culmination, even though its name is now used to cover an era [1919–25].” 10 Designating this span of years, the May Fourth Movement has become almost synonymous with an “iconoclastic” uprising against not only...
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