Susan Meiselas - Photofile
This new addition to theĀ PhotofileĀ series profiles American documentary photographer Susan Meiselas and includes short texts by Meiselas herself to accompany each work.
Best known for her work documenting the political upheaval in Central America during the 1970s and '80s, American photographer Susan Meiselas has been at the forefront of ethical debates around documentary photography for most of her career. Through close engagement with subjects such as war and exploitation, she has interrogated her own relationship to what sheās photographing, the circulation and dissemination of these images, and the pivotal questions around social and cultural representation and memory. Her influential contribution to the way audiences approach and engage with photography is as vital and resonant today as it was forty years ago
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Susan Meiselas - Photofile
Susan Meiselas - Photofile
This new addition to theĀ PhotofileĀ series profiles American documentary photographer Susan Meiselas and includes short texts by Meiselas herself to accompany each work.
Best known for her work documenting the political upheaval in Central America during the 1970s and '80s, American photographer Susan Meiselas has been at the forefront of ethical debates around documentary photography for most of her career. Through close engagement with subjects such as war and exploitation, she has interrogated her own relationship to what sheās photographing, the circulation and dissemination of these images, and the pivotal questions around social and cultural representation and memory. Her influential contribution to the way audiences approach and engage with photography is as vital and resonant today as it was forty years ago
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
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Description
This new addition to theĀ PhotofileĀ series profiles American documentary photographer Susan Meiselas and includes short texts by Meiselas herself to accompany each work.
Best known for her work documenting the political upheaval in Central America during the 1970s and '80s, American photographer Susan Meiselas has been at the forefront of ethical debates around documentary photography for most of her career. Through close engagement with subjects such as war and exploitation, she has interrogated her own relationship to what sheās photographing, the circulation and dissemination of these images, and the pivotal questions around social and cultural representation and memory. Her influential contribution to the way audiences approach and engage with photography is as vital and resonant today as it was forty years ago























