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University of California Press

About the Book

The latest volume in the Defining Moments in American Photography series, Trauma and Documentary Photography of the FSA proposes that we reconsider the work of the Farm Security Administration and its most beloved photographers in light of various forms of trauma in the 1930s. The authors offer new ways to understand this body of work by exploring a more variable idea of documentary photography than what the New Dealers proposed. Taking a critical look at the FSA photography project, they identify its goals, biases, contradictions, and ambivalences, while discerning strikingly independent directions among its photographers. Blair and Rosenberg discuss how, in the hands of socially minded photographers seeking to address and publicize suffering, photography and trauma mixed. In the volatility of that mixture, they argue, competing ideas for documentary took shape. Among the key figures studied here are some of the most beloved in American photography, including Walker Evans, Ben Shahn, and Aaron Siskind.

About the Author

Sara Blair is Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in English Language and Literature at the University of Michigan and author of Henry James and the Writing of Race and Nation (Cambridge, 2009). Eric Rosenberg is Associate Professor of Art and Art History at Tufts University and author of Trauma and Visuality in Modernity (Dartmouth, 2006).

Table of Contents

Introduction
Anthony W. Lee

Against Trauma: Documentary and Modern Times on the Lower East Side
Sara Blair

With Trauma: Walker Evans and the Failure to Document
Eric Rosenberg

Notes
Index

Reviews

“It is arguable that these photographs . . . changed the way in which photography looked at the world and how the world looked at photography. . . . Although it is a slim volume it is also quite remarkable for its contextualization of the photographers of the FSA and offers very perceptive insights into the impetus and methods of documenting the period. . . . An excellent contribution; moving, considered, articulate and painfully relevant.”
Metapsychology Online Review
“Farm Security Administration work from the 1930s, so often viewed in political and socioeconomic terms, is here reconsidered in light of new theories on how personal and collective trauma may have affected photographers such as Walker Evans, Ben Shahn and Aaron Siskind.”
Art In America
“Well conceived and boldly realized, these essays provide sophisticated, daring interpretive inquiries into a pivotal moment in the history of photography.”—Blake Stimson, author of The Pivot of the World: Photography and its Nation



“With these innovative essays, Blair and Rosenberg challenge our understanding of both the documentary impulse and the time when it was defined and canonized.”—Deborah Martin Kao, Richard L. Menschel Curator of Photography, Harvard University Art Museums