Episodes from A Flood of Pictures: The Formation of a Picture Culture in the United States
Event Details
Episodes from A Flood of Pictures: The Formation of a Picture Culture in the United States Book talk with author Dr. Michael Leja Friday, January 30th,
Event Details
Episodes from A Flood of Pictures: The Formation of a Picture Culture in the United States
Book talk with author Dr. Michael Leja
Friday, January 30th, 2026 at 1:30 PM ET
Virtual Event | Free
When and how did pictures begin to permeate everyday lives in the United States? What happened to those daily lives when they did? And what happened to pictures in the process? The formative period for this cultural transformation was the three decades before the Civil War, when the ordinary experiences of a large segment of the population came to include pictures of many kinds, including illustrations in books, pamphlets, and newspapers; photographs on cards; full-sheet printed pictures collected in scrapbooks or albums or hung on walls; posters and broadsheets; spectacular paintings displayed in theatrical venues; and more.
In a surprisingly short span of time pictures assumed important functions. They supplemented verbal texts—and in some cases overshadowed them—for conveying news and information; portraying people, places, and events; selling things; educating and instructing; promoting and disguising political agendas; and shaping social identities. All sorts of individual and collective experiences were increasingly mediated by visual representations.
This talk will highlight two of the influential projects featured in A Flood of Pictures. They help to illuminate a time before successful pictorial formulas for mass appeal were established, before an audience habituated to consumption of pictures existed, and before pictures had become thoroughly commodified.
A Flood of Pictures is available for purchase at University of Pennsylvania Press.
Hosted by the Visual Culture Program
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Time
January 30, 2026 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm(GMT-05:00)


