BLACK
IN WHITE AMERICA
Leonard Freed
Softbound,
10" x 8¾", 216
pages
208 duotone illustrations
2010, The Getty Museum
From the Publisher:
Black in White America by Leonard
Freed (1929-2006) is a facsimile edition of a powerful photo essay,
first published in 1968, that looks at African American life during
the civil rights era. The son of Eastern-European Jews, Freed
became interested in examining the cultural fabric of African
American life after working as a freelance photographer in Berlin
in the early 1960s and witnessing black soldiers protecting freedom
abroad while their brothers and sisters were fighting for civil
rights at home. He went on to become a pioneer in the genre of
socially conscious photojournalism.
Freed's photo essay presents a composite of the
daily lives of black people in the north and south, on city streets,
in housing projects, and in rural communities, living joyously,
peacefully, and defiantly during the greatest social struggle
of our times. The photographs are accompanied by personal interviews
and journal entries, lyrics of Negro spirituals and protest songs,
as well as an excerpt from Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'I have a
dream' speech. One picture shows Dr. King in an open convertible
being greeted by an eager crowd of admirers. Another presents
a young man lifting his fist to Freed's lens. Taken as a whole,
Black in White America conveys human dignity in the midst of the
struggle for racial equality.
Leonard Freed was born in Brooklyn, New York,
and began taking photographs in 1953 while living in the Netherlands.
He traveled the world on assignment for the international press
and published thirteen books. His photographs are included in
the collections of the International Center of Photography, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, and the J. Paul Getty
Museum.
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