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johnncox's photostream
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An amateur photographer with one year's experience re-lived 56 times.
I once had a history teacher who, as a course requirement, required us to read so many pages of history that was relevant to the course content. What we read was irrelevant as long as it concerned the topic of our study. But he allowed one page of material that was written during the period of history we were studying to be counted as equal to ten pages of material that was written by later commentators on that period. It wasn't that he thought the contemporaneous writing was unbiased or without an agenda, but that the bias and agenda of contemporaneous writing was more apparent and thus easier to filter out. He was of the opinion that modern day historians were much more sophisticated and guileful in concealing their biases and agendas under the veneer of objectivity than were their predecessors.
Somewhat based on the same philosophy, I view grave markers as being reflections of the design ascetics and sensibilities of the period in which the deceased lived. Whether it be a Neo-Classical revival, folk art, Victorian era public sculpture, the Arts and Crafts movement, the Egyptian craze, the International Style, or the current minimalist design preference, they are all reflected in our cemeteries. While I do find the currenrt preference for small, flat, flush with ground markers to be boring, they are, none the less, reflective of a minimalist design critera that is so popular today. I realize that grave markers are not a perfect reflection of the history of popular design criteria, but I think they are a far more complete record of the history of popular design criteria than they are given credit for. And to a far lesser extent than buildings, grave markers are not routinely replaced by newer more contemporary markers. And the grave markers that are preserved are more of a random selection of past grave markers rather than being preserved because today's historians deem them worthy of preservation. Preservation of grave markers is more of the luck of the draw as to the cemetery in which they were placed and the materials from which they were made than any post-hoc judgment as to their worthiness as a representative of their period.
johnncox's favorite photos from other Flickr members (30)
Contacts (37)
Groups (40)
- Jewish Graveyards 1,048 photos, 39 members
- The Doctors Graveyard 234 photos, 25 members
- Graves of Famous Female 185 photos, 34 members
- Dead Famous in the British Isles 499 photos, 78 members
- Pentax K-5 Photographers 50,131 photos, 1,977 members
- Geotagged: South Carolina 1,106 photos, 79 members
- Red-Tailed Hawks 3,216 photos, 351 members
- Howard Johnson's 584 photos, 100 members
- Egyptian-Themed Graves 98 photos, 24 members
- Weeping Willow Headstones 213 photos, 20 members
- Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) 221 photos, 22 members
- Anything goes in this little group 889 photos, 46 members
- Graves of Veterans of the American Civil War 11,937 photos, 722 members
- Flying Heads 2,295 photos, 55 members
- Motel Postcards & Ephemera 8,366 photos, 612 members
- I Love Old Signs! 53,186 photos, 4,309 members
- GRAVE MEDALLIONS 438 photos, 59 members
- Death Becomes Them 3,949 photos, 483 members
- Vintage Restaurant Postcards & Ephemera 3,764 photos, 365 members
- Log Cabins 2,182 photos, 551 members
- Mr. Business 158 photos, 334 members
- Graveyard - The Weekly Theme Group 35,978 photos, 1,580 members
- Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives 8,607 photos, 984 members
- Wash & Dry (Laundromats & Cleaners) 2,638 photos, 401 members
- Charlotte 14,673 photos, 921 members
- Cabarrus County 346 photos, 46 members
- London Cemeteries 8,573 photos, 865 members
- 700 Unicorns 164 photos, 74 members
- Cemetery Scrolls and Books 435 photos, 22 members
- Cemetery Animals 2,412 photos, 101 members
- BOKEH - for the common folk 146,376 photos, 7,566 members
- Taphophilia 12,984 photos, 275 members
- One Photo Story 2,716 photos, 873 members
- Arabians - Crabbet 70 photos, 23 members
- Mainz, Germany 5,107 photos, 381 members
- Morehead City, Atlantic Beach, and the NC Crystal Coast 1,285 photos, 163 members
- Carolina Beaches 7,160 photos, 838 members
- Pentax K10D / Samsung GX-10 93,954 photos, 3,431 members
- Woodmen Of The World (& Tree Grave Markers) 2,067 photos, 202 members
- Graves, Tombs And Cemeteries 203,479 photos, 29,702 members
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- Name:
- John Cox
- Joined:
- July 2006
- Currently:
- Charlotte, NC, USA
- I am:
- Male and Taken











