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Danny Lyon: American Blood: Selected Writings 1961-2020 [Kietas viršelis]

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Interviewee , By (photographer) , Introduction by , Edited by , Interviewee , Interviewee
  • Formatas: Hardback, 396 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 239x173x33 mm, weight: 953 g, 73 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Karma
  • ISBN-10: 1949172457
  • ISBN-13: 9781949172454
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 396 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 239x173x33 mm, weight: 953 g, 73 Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 18-Mar-2021
  • Leidėjas: Karma
  • ISBN-10: 1949172457
  • ISBN-13: 9781949172454
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

A half-century of social change in America, documented in the writings of Danny Lyon, photographer and author of The Bikeriders and The Destruction of Lower Manhattan

“From the beginning, even before he left the University of Chicago and headed south to take up a position as the first staff photographer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, Danny Lyon dreamed of being an artist in language as well as in pictures,” writes Randy Kennedy in the introduction to American Blood. In 1961, at the age of 19, for example, Lyon penned a brutally satirical article for a student mimeo magazine in which he argued for the deterrent power of prime-time televised executions (“the show would open, no doubt, like a baseball game, with a rendition of the National Anthem”).

Lyon is widely celebrated for his groundbreaking work in photography and film. Less recognized is the extensive body of writing that has broadened and reinforced his reach, in both the pages of his own publications and in others as varied as the Los Angeles Times, the New York Review of Books, Aperture, civil rights publications, underground magazines and Lyon's blog.

This 400-page volume spans republished and previously unpublished texts from nearly six decades of his career, comprising a vast, meticulously archived history of American social change. Also included are conversations between Lyon and Hugh Edwards, Nan Goldin and Susan Meiselas. As Kennedy writes, Lyon’s collected writings, “remarkable as both artistic and moral models, remain far too little known, especially for an author who has seen what he has seen and possesses the rare ability to write about it as he speaks; Lyon is a world-class talker, funny, wise, sanguine and indefatigable.”

Danny Lyon (born 1942) is one of the most influential documentary photographers of the last five decades. His many books include The Movement (1964), The Bikeriders, The Destruction of Lower Manhattan (1969), Knave of Hearts (1999), Like a Thief’s Dream (2007) and Deep Sea Diver (2011).

Recenzijos

American Blood," collects six decades of Mr. Lyons sharp-witted and sanguine essays, interviews and photographs, starting with his days as the staff photographer of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or S.N.C.C., when he packed both an Olivetti typewriter and a camera. -- Rebecca Bengal * New York Times *

Introduction
Leave Some Space: A Consideration of the Writings of Danny Lyon
8(6)
Randy Kennedy
Chapter 1 Struggle
Satirist Says He'd Televise Executions
14(6)
A Conversation with the Alabama Highway Patrol, Gadsden, Alabama
20(4)
Letter to My Parents
24(4)
On Billy McCune
28(4)
Billy George McCune, Inmate #122054
32(4)
Letter to Harris Dulany
36(4)
Introduction to the Autobiography of Billy McCune
40(6)
He Is Running for Us All
46(4)
Who Killed Camera Arts!
50(6)
A Sad Ringside Seat
56(4)
Ain't Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Round: The Use and Misuse of the Southern Civil Rights Movement
60(8)
Original introduction to Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement
68(6)
Television Is the Pits
74(6)
On Receiving an Honorary Degree
80(6)
Died for Freedom
86(4)
Blood in the Streets
90(6)
Remarks on the Work of Photography
96(6)
Kill the Koch Brothers
102(6)
Neither a Slave Nor a Master
108(8)
Julian Bond, 1940--2015: A Generation Is Vanishing
116(4)
Burn Zone
120(16)
Introduction to Josephine Ferorelli's "Climate Criminals"
136(4)
What Made the Sixties the Sixties
140(4)
Message to the Parkland Students
144(4)
Welcome to El Paso
148(6)
Dinker Is Dead
154(6)
Chapter 2 Record
A Photographer's Lament
160(6)
Conversations from a Phone Booth on Route 66
166(15)
Photographs
181(17)
A Conversation with Hugh Edwards
198(10)
Walker Evans: An American Photographer
208(4)
Danny Lyon: The Last Photographer
212(12)
The Photographic Album
224(8)
Pseudohistory/Pseudophotography
232(6)
Media Man
238(10)
In Praise of Agee
248(6)
Set It at F. 11
254(6)
Such Damnable Ghastliness: A Visit to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
260(12)
The End of the Age of Photography, Part One
272(10)
The End of the Age of Photography, Part Two: The Digi and the End of the World as We Have Known and Loved It
282(4)
The End of the Age of Photography, Part Three: The Girl with the Rolleiflex Meets the Homeless Man
286(4)
The End of the Age of Photography, The Conclusion
290(4)
Hugh Edwards
294(16)
Chapter 3 Stories
"Press Release" for Bleak Beauty Films and Pictures
310(4)
Who are we? Where do we come from? Where are we going?
314(12)
Leaving Time
326(4)
Doing Life: Nan Goldin Talks with Danny Lyon
330(14)
Noah Ernst Lyon
344(4)
Rebels
348(4)
Memories of Myself
352(6)
Conversation with Susan Meiselas
358(14)
In Memoriam: Jason Martin
372(4)
Smoke, Wind, and Fire
376(6)
When Fathers Die: Remembering Robert Frank
382(8)
Maine: A Cabin in the Woods
390(6)
Uprising
396