The book Seeing Through Race: A Reinterpretation of Civil Rights Photography, by Martin A. Berger explores the dual role of Civil Rights Movement photojournalism in promoting and limiting the possibility of civil rights reform in the 1960s. Berger argues that photos of civil rights protest – the unforgettable images of Bull Connor using attack dogs and firehouses on peaceful demonstrators in Birmingham, for instance – too often told the story of the movement in terms that reduced black Southerners to one-dimensional victims. Photos of white-on-black violence shamed Northern whites. But, those photos didn’t make them feel guilty, a distinction that’s Read more »
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