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New Deal Photography. USA 1935-1943
Barnes and Noble
New Deal Photography. USA 1935-1943
Current price: $25.00
Barnes and Noble
New Deal Photography. USA 1935-1943
Current price: $25.00
Size: OS
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“Through these travels and the photographs, I got to love the United States more than I could have in any other way.” — Jack Delano Amid the ravages of the Great Depression, the United States
(FSA) was first founded in 1935 to address the country’s rural poverty. Its efforts focused on improving the lives of sharecroppers, tenants, and very poor landowning farmers, with resettlement and collectivization programs, as well as modernized farming methods. In a parallel documentation program, the FSA hired a number of photographers and writers to
.” This book records the full reach of the FSA program from
, honoring its
. The photographs are arranged into four broad regional sections but otherwise allowed to speak for themselves—to provide individual impressions as much as they cumulatively build an
. The images are both color and black-and-white, and span the complete spetrum of American rural life. They show us
. We see subjects victim to the elements of nature as much as to the vagaries of the global economic market. We find the work of such perceptive, sensitive photographers as
and
and read their own testimonies to the FSA project and their encounters with their subjects, including Lange’s worn, weather-beaten and iconic
. What unites all of the pictures is a
, as much as to the witness they bear to this particular period of the American past. The subjects are entrenched in the hardships of their historical lot as much as they are caught in universal cycles of growing, playing, eating, aging, and dying. Yet they face the viewer with what is utterly their own:
.