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Looking Backward: A Photographic Portrait of the World at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century
Contributor(s): Lesy, Michael (Author)
ISBN: 039323973X     ISBN-13: 9780393239737
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
OUR PRICE:   $44.96  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: April 2017
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Photography | History
- History | Modern - 19th Century
- History | Modern - 20th Century
Dewey: 778.4
LCCN: 2016031839
Physical Information: 1" H x 9.8" W x 10.3" (3.45 lbs) 256 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 19th Century
- Chronological Period - 20th Century
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Pull the yellowed card from the box and slide it into the viewer. Two binocular images, nearly identical, reveal a scene from the past in vivid, three-dimensional detail. Transcending space and time, the card shows the world as it existed in 1900, a moment when technology collapsed borders; when wars ignited between great powers; when natural forces brought disaster on surging, vulnerable cities--a moment very much like our own.

In 1900 the stereograph was king. Its three-dimensional optics created a virtual presence for the viewer. Millions of Americans, especially schoolchildren, absorbed ideas about race, class, and gender from such 3D images, the embodiment of the notion that "seeing is believing." Drawing on an enormous, rarely seen collection of some 300,000 stereographic views spanning the first decade of the twentieth century, Michael Lesy presents nearly 250 images displaying a riot of peoples and cultures, stark class divisions, and unsettling glimpses of daily life a century ago.

Like Lesy's landmark works of American macabre, Wisconsin Death Trip and Murder City, Looking Backward slides the reader into suspended animation. Haunting views of the early twentieth century's most significant events at home and in the farthest reaches of the world--war, rebellion, industrial revolution, and natural catastrophe--flank pictures of the last remnants of the premodern natural world. Lesy's evocative essays reassert the primacy of the stereograph in American visual history. He profiles the photographers who saw the world through their prejudices and the companies that sold their images everywhere. In underscoring the unnerving parallels between that period and our own, Looking Backward reveals a history that shadows us today.


Contributor Bio(s): Lesy, Michael: - Michael Lesy is one of America's leading photographic scholars. His books include Wisconsin Death Trip, Murder City, Angel's World, and Long Time Coming. He lives in Amherst, Massachusetts, where he teaches literary journalism at Hampshire College.