I mean seriously, how often have you seen the bulk of esplanade photos or the usual xmm poses under "fashion". Put it crudely, it is the camera that is doing the job more than the photographer.
Just to play devil's advocate. How does it make a difference? Taking the legal standpoint for example, copyright exists in a photograph whether the photographer took hours to achieve his shot or just grabbed it out of the car window. Nor does it matter if the idea is not original, which means that the law recognises the photographer as the author of the work even if the Esplanade shot for example requires little real creativity.
Go start searching on flickr and you will find MILLIONS of good-looking photographs but few make impact. In another words, there is no depth in the photographs. For commercial or stock, they work fine but they're nothing outstanding.
Personally, speaking both as a lover of photography, as well as a student of photography (ie approaching this from both approaches), I find that if a photograph is "good-looking" then it has "impact". But perhaps we differ in what we consider "good-looking"; I wouldn't consider a run of the mill Esplanade shot "good-looking" for example.
Also continuing the devil's advocate trend, there are many people, and I suspect that would be the majority of people, who would rather look at a well-executed photograph of the Esplanade than a Jackson Pollock original. Run of the mill or otherwise.
There is also a common misconception that a good photograph needs to be aesthetic.
I largely agree with your point, but again the flip side to this is, there is also a common (mis?)conception that fine art needs to be different, which very often manifests itself in the form of throwing conventional ideas of art out the window.
If you are really interested, toss away that camera book and start searching our local libraries for books on photography rather than cameras.
As in the previous post, I couldn't agree more. My Masters degree was totally about photography and completely not about cameras at all; thinking about it I'm not sure we ever discussed a camera and we certainly never mentioned a camera model. Or brand.
If you were to look at it, the lighting isn't always perfect, nor the focus, nor the composition. But there is a deeper meaning in this photographs.
Question. If the same set of pictures were taken with perfect lighting, focus, and sound composition, would the set of pictures still have the same "deeper meaning", and would they be stronger or weaker for it?
If you approach it honestly then I suspect you and many others of the same ilk would argue that the more technically correct (and conventional) set of images would be too... commercial even. But the question to ask is why does art reward flawed technique, intentional or otherwise?
Personally I can appreciate certain forms of work of this type, particularly when the flawed elements contribute to the photographer's vision and message. (I liked the linked images, to be clear). But in some instances some artists are wont to utilise flawed technique as the only way that they can stand out.