fear-of-the-visual

Fear of the Visual

AUTHOR: Sasanka Perera
FORMAT: Hardcover
First Published by Orient Blackswan Pvt Ltd in 2020
AVAILABILITY: AVAILABILITY: Tambapanni Academic Publishers, 2025 – Buy Now

Photography had played a central role in the emergence of anthropology as a discipline in the late colonial period. Despite this, why is it that photography is not taken seriously in contemporary mainstream social anthropology and sociology in South Asia—and, to a great extent, in the rest of the world—as a possible way of conducting research or as an object of research?

The Fear of the Visual? explores this question through a study of the histories of anthropology / sociology and photography. The author studies past and present practices of photography – including contemporary practices such as the ‘selfie’, and the framing of social / familial events such as wedding photography – and possibilities with regard to theorising the visual.

He also tries to understand the ‘intellectual rupture’ that led to the visual being removed from mainstream sociology / social anthropology to the separate fields of visual sociology and visual anthropology.

This book is as personal as it is academic. The author opens each chapter with personal recollections, choosing to not separate the two domains that have impacted each other in important ways. Central to these personal narratives and the academic discussions that follow are photographs, which form a core part of the argument.

Author
Chairman of the Colombo Institute for Human Sciences. He taught sociology at University of Colombo from 1993 to 2011 and at South Asian University from 2011 to 2024. He was Head of Sociology at University of Colombo from 2009 to 2011. He is the author of Warzone Tourism in Sri Lanka: Tales from Darker Places in Paradise (2016), Violence and the Burden of Memory: Remembrance and Erasure in Sinhala Consciousness (2015), and Artists Remember and Artists Narrate: Memory and Representation in Sri Lankan Visual Arts (2012).