Abstract
This essay illustrates how selfies, as both a technological innovation and an everyday photographic practice, challenge several pictorial conventions—both aesthetically and technologically. The essay offers a theoretical analysis of how selfies, as post-photographic objects, unsettle these premises and overturn representational frameworks in image-making that had been taken for granted since the medium’s inception. It further argues that selfies, as relatively new techno-visual objects, disrupt established visual norms, generate new socio-visual expectations and give rise to a distinct visual vocabulary. Networked publics have transformed how images are produced, consumed and circulated across space and time. The dissemination of image-making practices and the democratisation of the medium have altered the material form, meaning, manipulation, ownership, exchange, flow and accumulation of images. This shift has reshaped attitudes towards personal image-making and influenced how everyday life is viewed, revisited and visually expressed. The simultaneous convergence of posing, performing, composing, shooting and viewing constitutes the visual content of any selfie—making it a unique visual object. In this framework, the image-maker, the image and the referent—as well as the viewer, the act of viewing and the viewed—collapse into one. In a selfie, the photographer becomes the photograph, and the live (re)view of the self becomes the image itself, as will be argued.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
