We a good story
Quick delivery in the UK

American Modernism and Depression Documentary

About American Modernism and Depression Documentary

American Modernism and Depression Documentary surveys the uneven terrain of American modernity through the lens of the documentary book. Drawing on well-known works in the genre, Jeff Allred argues that photo-texts of the 1930s stage a set of mediations between rural hinterlands and metropolitan areas, between elite producers of culture and the "forgotten man" of Depression-era culture, between a myth of consensual national unity and various competing ethnic and regional collectivities. In light of the complexity this entails, this study takes issue with a critical tradition that has painted the "documentary expression" of the 1930s as a simplistic and propagandistic divergence from literary modernism. Allred situates these texts, and the "documentary modernism" they represent, as a central part of American modernism and response to American modernity, as he looks at the impoverished sharecroppers depcited in the groundbreaking Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, the disenfranchised African Americans in Richard Wright's polemical 12 Million Black Voices, and the experiments in depression-era photography found in Life magazine.

Show more
  • Language:
  • English
  • ISBN:
  • 9780195335682
  • Binding:
  • Hardback
  • Pages:
  • 288
  • Published:
  • December 23, 2009
  • Dimensions:
  • 236x155x25 mm.
  • Weight:
  • 558 g.
Delivery: 2-3 weeks
Expected delivery: September 10, 2025

Description of American Modernism and Depression Documentary

American Modernism and Depression Documentary surveys the uneven terrain of American modernity through the lens of the documentary book. Drawing on well-known works in the genre, Jeff Allred argues that photo-texts of the 1930s stage a set of mediations between rural hinterlands and metropolitan areas, between elite producers of culture and the "forgotten man" of Depression-era culture, between a myth of consensual national unity and various competing
ethnic and regional collectivities. In light of the complexity this entails, this study takes issue with a critical tradition that has painted the "documentary expression" of the 1930s as a simplistic and propagandistic divergence from literary modernism. Allred situates these texts, and the "documentary
modernism" they represent, as a central part of American modernism and response to American modernity, as he looks at the impoverished sharecroppers depcited in the groundbreaking Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, the disenfranchised African Americans in Richard Wright's polemical 12 Million Black Voices, and the experiments in depression-era photography found in Life magazine.

User ratings of American Modernism and Depression Documentary



Find similar books
The book American Modernism and Depression Documentary can be found in the following categories:

Join thousands of book lovers

Sign up to our newsletter and receive discounts and inspiration for your next reading experience.