Daring to Look: Dorothea Lange's Photographs and Reports from the Field
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Average customer review:Product Description
Daring to Look presents never-before-published photos and captions from Dorothea Lange’s fieldwork in California, the Pacific Northwest, and North Carolina during 1939. Lange’s images of squatter camps, benighted farmers, and stark landscapes are stunning, and her captions—which range from simple explanations of settings to historical notes and biographical sketches—add unexpected depth, bringing her subjects and their struggles unforgettably to life, often in their own words.
When Lange was dismissed from the Farm Security Administration at the end of 1939, these photos and field notes were consigned to archives, where they languished, rarely seen. With Daring to Look, Anne Whiston Spirn not only returns them to the public eye, but sets them in the context of Lange’s pioneering life, work, and struggle for critical recognition—firmly placing Lange in her rightful position at the forefront of American photography.
“A thoughtful and meticulously researched account of Lange’s career. . . . Spirn, a photographer herself, traces Lange’s path, visiting her locations and subjects in a fascinating series of ‘then and now’ shots.”—Publishers Weekly
“Dorothea Lange has long been regarded as one of the most brilliant photographic witnesses we have ever had to the peoples and landscapes of America, but until now no one has fully appreciated the richness with which she wove images together with words to convey her insights about this nation. We are lucky indeed that Anne Whiston Spirn, herself a gifted photographer and writer, has now recovered Lange’s field notes and woven them into a rich tapestry of texts and images to help us reflect anew on Lange’s extraordinary body of work.”—William Cronon, author of Nature’s Metropolis
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #77779 in Books
- Published on: 2009-09-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 376 pages
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In this thoughtful and meticulously researched account of Lange's career, Spirn focuses on the photographer's largely unpublished 1939 portfolio and champions it as a masterful mix of the visual and the verbal. Lange's stark photographs and accompanying field reports testify to her desire to show real Depression-era Americans—displaced and downtrodden, but carrying on nevertheless—as honestly as possible; they are published as a whole in the second section of Spirn's book. These photographs include Lange's much vaunted portraits—of sharecroppers hunched in tobacco fields and mothers with their hungry children—as well as some of her lesser known landscape photography. The reverential Spirn, a photographer herself, traces Lange's path, visiting her locations and subjects in a fascinating series of then and now shots, an homage to Lange, who Spirn compellingly argues deserves to take her place as one of the most important American artists of the Twentieth Century. (May)
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Review
"As a lifelong friend of Dorothea Lange, I was absolutely astounded and thoroughly pleased with Daring to Look. Anne Whiston Spirn has hit the nail on the head: she knows the secret of understanding good photography--and of understanding Dorothea Lange''s life as well. An astonishing book."-Rondal Partridge, photographer and former assistant to Lange (Rondal Partridge )
"Dorothea Lange has long been regarded as one of the most brilliant photographic witnesses we have ever had to the peoples and landscapes of America, but until now no one has fully appreciated the richness with which she wove images together with words to convey her insights about this nation. We are lucky indeed that Anne Whiston Spirn, herself a gifted photographer and writer, has now recovered Lange's field notes and woven them into a rich tapestry of texts and images to help us reflect anew on Lange's extraordinary body of work."-William Cronon, author of Nature's Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (William Cronon )
"Dorothea Lange is known as one of the greatest American photographers, but she was also a remarkable observer whose field notes have largely remained unpublished until now. In Daring to Look, Anne Whiston Spirn, a landscape architect, photographer, and writer herself, has edited Lange''s field notes, adding her own interpretative essays on Lange''s work, and rephotographing some of Lange's sites. This is a very important book deserving wide readership because it provides a wonderful combination of the socially conscious work of two gifted artists and writers."-Dolores Hayden, Yale University (Dolores Hayden )
"Dorothea Lange is one of America's greatest documentary photographers. Daring to Look: Dorothea Lange's Photographs and Reports from the Field is a very important book. It provides a fascinating insight into her FSA photographs and writings during that time. Ms. Lange's photographs, especially the work she did for the FSA were a great inspiration for so many photographers, including myself."--Mary Ellen Mark, photographer (Mary Ellen Mark )
"In this thoughtful and meticulously researched account of Lange''s career, Spirn focuses on the photographer''s largely unpublished 1939 portfolio and champions it as a mix of the visual and the verbal. Lange''s stark photographs and accompanying field reports testify to her desire to show real Depression-era Americans-displaced and downtrodden, but carrying on nevertheless-as honestly as possible. . . . Spirn, a photographer herself, traces Lange''s path, visiting her locations and subjects in a fascinating series of ''then and now'' shots, an homage to Lange, who Spirn compellingly argues deserves to take her place as ''one of the most important American artists of the Twentieth Century.''"-Publishers Weekly (Publishers Weekly )
"What a sui generis and beautiful imagination (and manifestation) of a book: paean, recontextualization, historicizing, rediscovery, documentation, investigation and collaboration. It is its own genre, and so lavishly produced; the writing is sharp as a bird''s beak, poetic and exacting. And Spirn's own photographs make good company beside those of Lange. I loved reading her notes, feeling the picture take on even more weight that way. My wife and I both lived in this book in those last weeks of summer." (Forrest Gander, Brown University )
"I''ve just finished reading Daring to Look. Wow! Where to begin? As a historian, the first aspect of the book that leaps out at me is the thorough and imaginative research in a variety of sources and the broad contextualization in both public policy and social and economic history. The other aspect that leaps out simultaneously, really, is just how beautifully it is produced. It is such a pleasure just to hold and look through. Spirn's introduction makes Lange come alive, places her in her time, and just skewers those who would diminish her achievements. Wonderful. And the end, returning to find the places she photographed, was a brilliant idea, and Spirn draws the circle with great sensitivity. And I just love the pictures. I don''t find the people depressing. Somehow they carry a dignity, sometimes even a nobility, that gives them an iconic quality. They look, by and large, like just fine people, classic Americans-they couldn''t be anything else. The landscapes are so evocative, too. This is not to say that the book doesn''t document the hardships of the Depression-it does, in both a systemic and very personal way-but the characters transcend them with grit, resilience, and acceptance." (Michael Katz, author of The Undeserving Poor: From the War on Poverty to the War )
"These images endure, not as relics of the past but as vital, living documents. We stare, the images stare back, and recognition flashes in our eyes."-Louis P. Masur, Los Angeles Times (Louis P. Masur Los Angeles Times )
"From her broad knowledge base and sympathetic understanding of the history of the locale, Spirn offers a rich study of past and present life and landscape."-Anne Hammond, Times Higher Education Supplement (Anne Hammond Times Higher Education Supplement )
"A revealing glimpse of Lange''s working methods and social vision." (Choice )
"In the fascinating Daring to Look, a product of dogged archival reconstruction and shrewd readings of individual photographs, Anne Whiston Spirn presents a case study of Lange's artistic agility. . . . Spirn demonstrates how vigorously the joint effort of word and image rebuts the standard deprecations of Lange's work."-Jordan Bear, Bookforum (Jordan Bear Bookforum )
"Imaginative and beautifully produced, Anne Whiston Spirn''s book is a delightful hybrid: a newly published primary source, a photography book with a fine introduction . . . an apologia for Lange against her often snobbish critics." (Linda Gordon Oregon Historical Quarterly )
About the Author
Customer Reviews
Daring to Look: Dorothea Lange's Photographs and Reports from the Field
As someone who used iconic Lange photos in my American Studies classes for years, this book in one I wish I had had BEFORE I retired last year! Their are photos I hadn't seen, in areas I didn't know she worked and, most importantly, her 'reports from the field'. These notes and extended captions give tremendous background to the photos and would be very interesting to students.
Rare combination of pen and image
Anne Spirn's latest book is really quite outstanding. She combines the clear eye of a superlative photographer (her own) to write in limpid prose about the clear eye and conscience of another (Dorothea Lange's). This is not just a meta-documentary, a documentary of a documentary, it is also an examination of the changes that have been wrought in the United States over the last two to three generations, in the physical landscape, in the socio-economy, and in our moral landscape. Lange represented in her photographs some of the critical ironies in the fabric of America - the high mindedness of the WPA program, the debilitating material poverty of her subjects and equally, a spiritual nobility as revealed in the images and her notes. Lange herself, her photographs and the vast subject matter she made her essay are little known in the new generation. Anne Spirn has done the next generation a great service in tilling this soil anew.
Portrait of an Era
As a good work by Anne Whiston Spirn, It's a very important book to understand those critical years for american people, through Dorothea Lange's lenses.



