References
- “$30,000 Eastman Prize Contest Ends May 31, 1929! Still Time to Win Big Cash Awards.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers May 1929: 2–4.
- Adams, Timothy Dow. Light Writing and Life Writing: Photography in Autobiography. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1999.
- “The Autographic Kodaks.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1914: 3–8.
- Barros, Carolyn A. Autobiography: Narrative of Transformation. Michigan: U of Michigan P, 2001.
- “Because this is the First Number.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers September 1913: 3.
- Bradford, Cartoonist (Walter R. Bradford). “ Home Pictures that are Different.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1922: 10–4.
- Brockmeier, Jens. “Autobiographical Time.” Narrative Inquiry 10.1 (2000): 51–73. doi: 10.1075/ni.10.1.03bro
- Chalfen, Richard. Snapshot Versions of Life. Bowling Green: Bowling Green State U Popular P, 1987.
- Coe, Brian. Cameras: From Daguerreotypes to Instant Pictures. Gothenburg, Swed.: Nordbok, 1978.
- Davis, W. S. “Vacation Picture Books.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Oct. 1926: 18–20.
- “Don't Look at the Camera!.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers May 1926: 15.
- “The Flower of the Family in the Wheat Field.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Aug. 1922: 24–25.
- Gernsheim, Helmut, and Alison Gernsheim. The History of Photography. London: Thames, 1969.
- Hurter, Bill. Family Portrait Photography. Buffalo, NY: Amherst, 2006.
- “The Kid and the Cop: A Kodak Story that Really Doesn't Need These Few Words.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers July 1917: 14–15.
- King, Barry. “Photo-Consumerism and Mnemonic Labor: Capturing the ‘Kodak Moment’.” Afterimage 21.2 (1993): 9–13.
- Lee, Paul Griffin. “The Greatest Christmas Card Ever Sent: At Least Grandmother Thought So.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1926: 12–14.
- “A Little Cousin of the Post Card.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1914: 19–21.
- Lowell, Robert T. “Birthday Pictures.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Feb. 1929: 18–21.
- Lowell, Robert T. “ Story-Telling Pictures: What They Are and How to Make Them.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers May 1929: 11–14.
- Morton, Lawrence. “Expression.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1926: 2–11.
- Musello, Christopher. “Family Photography.” Images of Information: Still Photography in the Social Sciences. Ed. Jon Wagner. Beverly Hills: SAGE, 1979. 101–18.
- “Musings of the Kodak Philosopher.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers July 1915: 3–5.
- “A Pictorial Diary.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Feb. 1916: 21–22.
- “Pictorial Interest.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Aug. 1915: 20–21.
- “The Pictorial Letter.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers June 1926: 22–23.
- “Picture Records—True to Life.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1915: 6.
- Richards, Merle T. “ Unusual Pictures about the Home.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Feb. 1929: 3–10.
- Rose, Gillian. Doing Family Photography: The Domestic, the Public and the Politics of Sentiment. Farnham: Ashgate, 2010.
- Rugg, Linda Haverty. Picturing Ourselves: Photography and Autobiography. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1997.
- Sartore, Joel, and John Healey. Photographing Your Family. Washington, DC: National Geographic, 2008.
- Sarvas, Risto, and David Frohlich. From Snapshots to Social Media—The Changing Picture of Domestic Photography. London: Springer, 2011.
- “The School Bell.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Oct. 1923: 3–4.
- Siegel, Elizabeth. Galleries of Friendship and Fame: A History of Nineteenth-Century American Photograph Albums. New Haven: Yale UP, 2010.
- Slater, Don. “Consuming Kodak.” Family Snaps: The Meaning of Domestic Photography. Eds. Jo Spence and Patricia Holland. London: Virago, 1991. 49–59.
- Slater, Don. “Domestic Photography and Digital Culture.” The Photographic Image in Digital Culture. Ed. Martin Lister. London: Routledge, 1995. 129–46.
- Slater, Don. “Marketing Mass Photography.” Visual Culture: The Reader. Eds. Jessica Evans and Stuart Hall. London: SAGE, 1999. 289–306.
- “Story-Telling Group.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Dec. 1915: 8–10.
- “Story-Telling Pictures.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Nov. 1915: 7–10.
- “Story Telling Pictures.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers July 1922: 2–9.
- Stotesbury, John A. “Snapshot Lives: Kodak Culture and South African Autobiographical Narratives of the Self.” Scrutiny2 5.2 (2000): 24–32. doi: 10.1080/18125440008565966
- Taylor, Maureen A. Preserving Your Family Photographs: How to Organize, Present, and Restore Precious Family Images. Cincinnati: Betterway, 2001.
- “To Our Readers.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers June 1915: 25.
- “A Vacation While You Wait.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Mar. 1915: 3–8.
- Volpe, Andrea. “Cartes de Visite Portrait Photographs and the Culture of Class Formation.” The Middling Sorts: Explorations in the History of the American Middle Class. Eds. Burton J. Bledstein and Robert D. Johnston. New York: Routledge, 2001. 157–69.
- Wallace, Albert Crane. “Making a Kodak Biography.” Kodakery: A Magazine for Amateur Photographers Feb. 1920: 15.
- Wang, Qi. The Autobiographical Self in Time and Culture. Oxford: Oxford UP, 2013.
- West, Nancy Martha. Kodak and the Lens of Nostalgia. Charlottesville: UP of Virginia, 2000.