I realize it's like pulling hens teeth to get photographers to think about "photography" rather than just the mechanics of the process.
I admire your pluck in attempting to do so

Still, I expect that you'll see plenty of anti-critical/anti-academic inverted snobbery in this thread anyway.
Well written article, showing some critical
nous.
I think the fragment of analysis that piqued my interest is the comment about Steichen, although in my reading of photographic history it's really Stieglitz that stands out as the figure who imposes his view of photography, of photographs as "art objects" to be judged with special criteria that aren't applied to other media. Perhaps it was the Stieglitz/Steichen "axis" that brought that about. Stieglitz was a powerful and massively influential voice in the development of American photography, and his ideas (those of a wealthy and immensely privileged man, whose education and milieu was resolutely 19th Century) often still dominate discussion of what makes a "good" photograph.
You can see them repeated over and over in discussions at APUG - that a photograph
is the print, that it is to be "perfect", scratches & dust all eliminated, with particular tonality. printed on fine paper, and mounted in exquisite frames, so that it can be looked at upon a wall ... and so on.
The paradigm for Stieglitz was really the idea of the fine etching, that a fine photograph should share those characteristics. His
Camera Work was notoriously expensive to produce, wasn't just a set of photographs in halftone.
With that as a dominant aesthetic, no surprise that someone like Eggleston might be greeted with dismay and an "Emperor's new clothes" mentality.
Interesting that he and a few others (Ed Ruscha being the best known probably) chose to publish in book form, where the Steichen/Stieglitz "quality" would be subsumed to the impact of the overall images. I think that's really rather important, especially when so many bang on (here and elsewhere) about the importance of the "fine print".
The reality is that extraordinarily few of us have seen more that a few hundred of these finest-of-the-fine prints, and that the very largest number of us have been exposed to the photography of "the greats" by reproductions - often pretty indifferent ones - in books and magazines.
The idea of the photographic print as a collectable item, with a particular value in the "art market" (the latter a modernist invention itself lets not forget, and we've even got a little skirmish going on in another thread about value) I think limits some people's freedom to express themselves photographically. They can't produce that "exhibition print" that (seemingly) everyone bangs on about, so they don't see themselves as a real or proper or expressive photographer. That seems a shame, and a waste of talent.
So anyway, thank you Eric for giving me the opportunity to ride my hobby-horse a bit
