Eyewitness: 150 Years of PhotojournalismCelebrate some of the most important and memorable images of photojournalism, from one of the first wars covered with a camera -- the Civil War -- to the compelling images from the Oklahoma City bombing. Along the way, see how photojournalism evolved technologically, and developed a conscience. |
Contents
Introduction | 7 |
18801920 George Russell | 31 |
18801920 Richard Lacayo | 55 |
Copyright | |
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19th century Alfred Eisenstaedt appeared artist battle battlefield became began Berlin bomb British calotype camera captured Carl Mydans celebrity chronicler City Civil coverage covered Daguerre daguerreotype darkroom David Douglas Duncan decade Dorothea Lange editors equipment Eugene Smith Europe famous Fellig Fenton fighting film fire Fort Peck Dam free-lance French German halftone Hare Henri Cartier-Bresson Hine's Hitler human Illustrated American Illustrierte images industrial invented James Nachtwey journalism Kertész later Leica lens Lewis Hine London look Luce Magnum Margaret Bourke-White Mathew Brady Munkacsi Nadar National newspapers O'Sullivan Paris photo agency photo essay photogra Photographer unknown photojournalism photojournalists picture magazines picture taking political portrait postwar produced published Pulitzer Robert Capa Rothstein Roy Stryker Salomon scenes sense shot soldier South Street Stryker studio subjects taken talent television tion tographs took troops Underwood & Underwood United Vietnam viewer woman workers wrote York