Abstract
This paper explores Martin Buber's dialogical philosophy and its influence on Lu Nan's photography. By comparing Lu Nan's trilogy, which documents marginalized communities in China, with Tyagan Miller's Covenant: Scenes from an African American Church, the study examines how Buber's I-Thou concept shapes their practices. It highlights their efforts to transcend the subjectivity-objectivity divide in photography, as suggested by Susan Sontag. Through the "Dialogical Aperture"framework, this research provides insights into the ethical and aesthetic dimensions of documentary photography, proposing Buber's philosophy as a pathway to more authentic representations of reality.
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Zhang, P. (2024). Dialogical Aperture - Martin Buber’s Philosophy of Dialogue and Lu Nan’s Photography. Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 51(2–3), 150–162. https://doi.org/10.1163/15406253-12340137
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