Images and enterprise : technology and the American photographic industry, 1839 to 1925

Bibliographic Information

Images and enterprise : technology and the American photographic industry, 1839 to 1925

Reese V. Jenkins

(John Hopkins studies in the history of technology)

Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987

  • pbk.

Other Title

Images and enterprise

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Note

Originally published, 1975

Johns Hopkins Paperbacks edition, 1987

Bibliography: p. 353-357

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

From the early daguerreotype to the rise of the motion picture, Images and Enterprise explores the business, technical, and social factors that transformed the American photographic industry between 1839 and 1925. Reese Jenkins's prize-winning history traces the technical changes that culminated in George Eastman's creation of the Kodak system of amateur photography in the 1880s. Its compact, simply operated cameras would revolutionize an entire industry-even if at first the whole camera had to be mailed back to the company for developing and reloading. Images and Enterprise also vividly portrays the emergence of cinematography in its relationship to traditional photography and reveals the growing importance of institutionalized research, as Eastman Kodak and the other American and European photographic materials manufacturers strove to develop commercially practical color photography.

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