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7.5: Framing Images- More Than Decoration

  • Page ID
    199324
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    Framing: More Than Decoration

    "When we look at a picture, we know perfectly well that it's a picture and not the real thing, but we suspend disbelief. For a moment, the picture is 'real'" (Bang 52).

    Although some might believe that images are decorative or "extra" in the persuasive context, this is rarely the case. Visuals in persuasion and advertising are purposeful, intentional, and strategically placed. "Creators of visual messages...are in control of where the viewer's eye looks within an image, the information it delivers, and the emotions that it evokes" (Jordan). One should not assume that an image's function is decorative, particularly in persuasion, because, as Bang so eloquently states, for a moment that image is very real to us.

    Images, camera angles, colors, design; all of these are chosen, and they are usually chosen for a reason. Case in point: when searching for a photo to illustrate the concept of syntactic indeterminacy, I chose the first photo of a happy couple drinking wine that I came across that fit the licensing requirements for open source textbooks. As I continued my research on visual persuasion, however, I read this amazing quote in Susan Sontag's Regarding the Pain of Others: "The photographic image…is always the image that someone chose; to photograph is to frame, and to frame is to exclude” (39). I realized that in my quest to find an open-source photo, I, too had made a choice and that choice had excluded diversity. Simply by changing my search parameters, I was able to find a more inclusive image that illustrated the same point. Photographers choose what and what not to photograph; others choose which photos to use or not. Framing refers to choices about what is included and what is left out. Both the choices made regarding the composition of a visual as well as the choices made about whether to include or exclude a visual ultimately affect the message conveyed.