How I Learned Not to Be a Photojournalist by Dianne Hagaman

How I Learned Not to Be a Photojournalist by Dianne Hagaman

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Summary

In this engaging and personal photographic essay Dianne Hagaman presents and interprets fifty-nine photographs that will interest anyone concerned with how images convey meaning. A photojournalist bored with the constraints of photographing for a daily newspaper, Hagaman set out to do a project that would be freer and more complete.

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How I Learned Not to Be a Photojournalist by Dianne Hagaman

In this engaging and personal photographic essay Dianne Hagaman presents and interprets fifty-nine photographs that will interest anyone concerned with how images convey meaning. A photojournalist bored with the constraints of photographing for a daily newspaper, Hagaman set out to do a project that would be freer and more complete. She began by photographing alcoholics on the Seattle streets, went from there to taking pictures in the missions where her subjects seek food and shelter, then moved on to the churches whose members volunteer to work in the missions. This in turn led her to consider the nature of religion in America more generally -- including the role of the media, hierarchy, sexism, and evangelism -- and to make photographs that embodied her increasingly complex view of these organizations and activities. As her understanding of her subjects grew more complicated, she found that she had to change the way she photographed and, more important, her conception of what constituted a "good photo." The story of this transition, and what she learned along the way, is told in both her text and her photos. Dianne Hagaman begins this account of her personal odyssey by describing the practices of contemporary photojournalism. Then, using photographs from her project, she reveals the process by which she painfully unlearned all the professional skills that had served her as a journalist but that prevented her full visual analysis of social reality. She also analyzes her photographs to reveal the compositional and other devices through which they communicate with viewers No other book combines such an intimate knowledge of photography with a critical view of the organizational basis for its practice. Hagaman's detailed analysis of individual pictures and their interrelationships, combined with her step-by-step account of the creation of a complex photographic essay, is unique, as is her trenchant critique of contemporary journalism.
Hagaman, Dianne: - Dianne Hagaman is a photographer and writer living in Seattle. She has taught photojournalism and visual communication at the Universities of Missouri and Washington and was staff photographer for the Seattle Times.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780813108704
ISBN 10 0813108705
Title How I Learned Not to Be a Photojournalist
Author Dianne Hagaman
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher The University Press of Kentucky
Year published 1996-04-18
Number of pages 160
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.