1. Introduction A note on the interviews Interviews with US-based photojournalists 2. Nina Berman 3. Patience Zalanga 4. Spencer Platt Interviews with photojournalists outside the US 5. Rodrigo Abd 6. Aly Song Interviews with Directors of Photography 7. Danese Kenon 8. MaryAnne Golon Afterword Acknowledgments
Lauren Walsh teaches at The New School and New York University, where she is the Director of the Gallatin School’s Photojournalism Lab. She is also the Director of Lost Rolls America, a national public archive of photography and memory.
This powerful book focuses on the crises of 2020—but its
implications go well beyond that one year. Through the Lens asks us
to rethink the ways we view the world through images and to
understand that unconscious sociopolitical patterns can be
influenced by visuals. This important book is essential reading for
anyone interested in how history and culture are shaped by the
camera. SHEILA PREE BRIGHT, award-winning photog-rapher and author
of #1960Now: Photographs of Civil Rights Activists and Black Lives
Matter Protests Through the Lens is a nuanced and sophisticated
exploration of the role of photography in the Covid-19 pandemic and
Black Lives Matter, two historic moments that have raised
fundamental questions about photojournalism ethics, identity, and
the impact of technological shifts on the field and norms of visual
documentation. Dr. Walsh weaves compelling interviews with erudite
analysis to contextualize the powerful photos that tell the stories
of these transformational events. DR. COURTNEY RADSCH, former
Advocacy Director with the Committee to Protect Journalists Through
the Lens provides a rare look into the world of photojournalism,
giving extraordinary insight into the experiences of those who
photographed 2020’s major upheavals. It also forces us to think
about the social, political, and historical dynamics of our time
and the vital role that photos can play in contemporary
conversations. Put simply, it is a masterful overview of the role
of photography today. BARBARA DAVIDSON, Pulitzer Prize-winning
photographer
"There have been profound critics and philosophers about
photography in the past, and recently the voice I find most
interesting is that of Lauren Walsh… Walsh has a particular talent
of bringing voices of photographers together in conversation, to
help us understand not aperture or the rule of thirds, but
significantly more important things like dignity and context and
purpose. Her new book, Through The Lens: The Pandemic and Black
Lives Matter, is a book of morals and beliefs and values that form
the core of who we are, our work and why we do it." –Frames
Magazine"We may be living in an image-saturated world, but the
practice of photojournalism including the decisions that photo
editors make and the experiences of photographers in the field
rarely receive attention. Lauren Walsh’s new book, Through the
Lens: The Pandemic and Black Lives Matter, aims to change that,
delivering unique insights into the personal and professional
challenges photojournalists faced in covering these two seismic
global events." –Head On Interactional Magazine "[W]hat happens
when the stories being covered force photojournalists into new
areas with new ethical and physical safety concerns combined with
outright attacks on the press themselves? Dr. Lauren Walsh… looks
at both the ethical and safety minded challenges that
photojournalists have faced covering both the Covid-19 pandemic and
the Black Lives Matter Movement in her new book Through the Lens:
The Pandemic and Black Lives Matter." – Blind Magazine"Richly
illustrated with evocative photos, this book reminds us that
photojournalism doesn’t simply mirror the world; it has the power
to change it." -- YAHOO NEWS"For a field still dominated by white
men, 'Through the Lens' brings a refreshing diversity of voices to
a set of questions around privacy and consent, the role of
captions, graphic imagery and censorship."Colin Dickey, LOS ANGELES
TIMES"Visual journalism holds the power to attest, to interrogate,
to educate. In the current conflicts around the world, journalists
and photographers relay stories to their audiences, yet few may
stop to consider how these images and news features are created and
what roles they can play in future. In her new book THROUGH THE
LENS: THE PANDEMIC AND BLACK LIVES MATTER, Lauren Walsh conducts
interviews with leading photographers and photo editors in visual
journalism during 2020’s biggest crises, and discussed the
challenges they faced in this time, as well as how photojournalism
continues to evolve in the present." -- Photomonitor"In her
excellent new book, Through the Lens: The Pandemic and Black Lives
Matter, NYU professor Lauren Walsh attempts to understand the
historic year through the vantage point of the photojournalists
that were on the frontlines capturing a multitude of unprecedented
events. Walsh records the emotional toll that came with "covering
death, destruction, and endemic racism." --VICE WORLD NEWS
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