Susan Sontag’s On Photography is a landmark collection of essays that examines how cameras shape memory, politics, and power in a world saturated with images. Blending philosophy, cultural criticism, and art theory, Sontag explores how photographs both reveal and distort reality, turning experience into collectible visual evidence. The book questions the ethics of looking at suffering, the voyeuristic impulse in documentary photography, and the way images influence our sense of history and truth. Essential for readers of theory, media studies, and visual culture, it remains a foundational text for understanding the social impact of photography in both analog and digital ages.
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