Picturing Us

African American Identity in Photography

Edited by Deborah Willis

paperback

$14.00

Winner of the International Center of Photography's Award for Writing on Photography.  Writers, filmmakers, poets, and cultural critics use photographs to analyze the modern African-American experience.
A startling, revealing look at photographic representation and its effect on African American identity and consciousness.
-- Kirkus Reviews
Winner of the International Center for Photography's 1995 Award for Writing on Photography, Picturing Us brings together a diverse group of African American writers, scholars, and filmmakers in the first concerted effort to analyze and respond to the photographic images of blacks through history. The book's contributors--including bell hooks, E. Ethelbert Miller, Angela Davis, and others--examine the personal and public issues embedded in family portraits and news photographs, movie stills and mug shots.

Deborah Willis is curator of exhibitions at the National African American Museum Project of the Smithsonian Institute.  Her previous books include Early Black Photographers: 1840 to 1940 and VanDerZee: Photographer 1886-1983.  She lives in Washington, D.C.
African American Studies / Photography
Spring 1996
paperback
6 1/8 x 9 1/4, 224 pages
978-1-56584-106-2

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