Abstract
The transition from analogue to digital photography was not accomplished in a single step. It required a number of feeder technologies which enabled and structured the nature of digital photography. Among those traced in this article, the most important is the genesis of the raster grid, which is now hard-wired into the design of the most widely employed photographic chip, the charge-coupled device (CCD). In tracing this history from origins in half-tone printing, the authors argue that qualities available to analogue photographers are no longer available to digital, and that these changes correspond to historical developments in the wider political and economic world. They conclude, however, that these losses may yet be turned into gains. © 2013, Sage Publications. All rights reserved.
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Cubitt, S., Palmer, D., & Walkling, L. (2015). Enumerating Photography from Spot Meter to CCD. Theory, Culture & Society, 32(8), 245–265. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276412472377
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