The Photography of Victorian Scotland

Front Cover
Edinburgh University Press, 2012 - Art - 209 pages

This is the first book to provide a full and coherent introduction to the photography of Victorian Scotland. There are many books which deal with particular elements and individual photographers, which show the interest in the subject, but no book draws everything together to provide an understanding of the multi-faceted nature of photography and the inter-relationship with other activities in the society of the time. This authoritative introduction, building upon these other publications, will provide a wide-ranging appreciation of early Scottish photography and in particular that Scottish photography was in the vanguard of many international trends. The material has been structured and the topics organised, with appropriate illustrations, as both a readable narrative and a foundation text for the subject.

Key Features

Draws together a coherent narrative of the many different aspects of photography in Victorian Scotland

Shows how photography was related to, and was influenced by, the society and culture of the time

Highlights how Scotland and Scots were in the forefront of photography in Victorian times

Uses the most apt illustrations to emphasise the quality of the image-making

Includes 130 illustrations

About the author (2012)

Roderick Simpson is a photographer, writer, researcher and lecturer who specialises in early Scottish photography. He is a tutor of Scottish Victorian Photography at the University of Edinburgh Open Studies and a freelance photography researcher for the University of Glasgow Library. He has published articles in 'Studies in Photography' (SSHoP) and 'History of Photography' (a Routledge journal) and is a contributor to the Encyclopaedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography (Routledge 2008).

Bibliographic information