This chapter centers on interviews with women who were photographed as students during the original eugenics-era posture photography project. Their accounts reveal how the experience was felt—at the time and across the decades—as unsettling, invasive, or routine. These embodied memories offer critical insight into the affective impact and enduring traces of institutional surveillance.

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Bodies Remember: The Affective Life of Posture Photography

  • Andrea N. Baldwin,
  • Sangyoon Lee,
  • Heidi Henderson

摘要

This chapter centers on interviews with women who were photographed as students during the original eugenics-era posture photography project. Their accounts reveal how the experience was felt—at the time and across the decades—as unsettling, invasive, or routine. These embodied memories offer critical insight into the affective impact and enduring traces of institutional surveillance.