River of Shadows¶
writer: russell j.t. dyer; posted: sep 2017
River of Shadows
author: Rebecca Solnit
edition: 1
published: 2004
publisher: Penguin
isbn: 978-0142004104
pages: 320
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Although she points her lens at Muybridge, her true subject is the perceptual revolution of the 19th century when the railroad, the telegraph and the camera transformed the experience of space and time. English-born Muybridge launched his career in 1867 with scenes of Yosemite and San Francisco. He soon began the experiments with “instantaneous” photography that led to the famous motion studies. Except for its most dramatic moments-the murder of his wife’s lover, a suit against Stanford-the photographer’s life remains obscure. Insistent on writing a biography nonetheless, Solnit pads the book with an account of workers’ strikes, an aside on Victorian geology and other irrelevant details. Left to speculate about Muybridge’s inspirations, she attributes much to a head injury resulting from a stagecoach accident. Her claims about Stanford and Muybridge as the progenitors of Silicon Valley and Hollywood are equally unsubstantiated. If the book fails as biography, however, it succeeds as a critical essay on Muybridge’s art and a reflection on the meaning of space and time.