"Historiography and Historiophoty" is the name of an essay by historian and literary critic Hayden White first published in 1988 in The American Historical Review.
In the essay, White coins the term "historiophoty" to describe the "representation of history and our thought about it in visual images and filmic discourse".
[1] White says historiophoty "...is in contrast to Historiography which is the representation of history in verbal images and written discourse,".
[1] White originally coined the term as a rhetorical device in response to an essay by Robert A. Rosenstone in the same issue of AHR entitled "History in images/History in words: Reflections on the possibility of really putting history onto film".
For example Brian Le Beau wrote "Historiography Meets Historiophoty: The Perils and Promise of Rendering the Past on Film" in American Studies Volume 38, no.