Thanks to Alyson Beecher's Non-Fiction Picture Book Challenge at Kidlit Frenzy,
An added bonus: please be sure to read the comments. Some have posted other interesting links!
When I taught, one of my goals for my students was to learn there are many ways in our world to communicate stories. And I wanted them to try those ways, to find their own "voice" whether it was in words, song/sound, or varied areas of the visual.
I want you to imagine using this book with students, to ask them to find something they can photograph that might persuade someone to change their thinking about that something. There are so many ways to make a difference, and Dorothea Lange used photography.
Dorothea’s Eyes: Dorothea Lange Photographs The
Truth - Barb Rosenstock and Gérard DuBois
I know the photographs of Dorothea
Lange, but until now I didn’t know her story. Born to love seeing what others
might miss, early on she loves faces. At seven, she contracts polio, ending
with a limp and a brace. She learns that others make fun of it, learns to be
still and hide unnoticed, but at the same time, she watches. Through tough
money times, her father leaves and Dorothea must go with her mother and wait
long hours while her mother works. She is a new girl and often skips school to
peer into tenements of immigrants, as the story goes, “watchful” and
“curious”. DuBois’s illustrations follow
the text with muted browntone scenes of Dorothea’s story. She tells her family
she’s going to be a photographer, and they are stunned. “It. . .It isn’t
ladylike” But she persists and her first work is only to answer phones and
mount photographs. She learns about cameras, she studies the negatives, and
again knows that she loves faces. Through happenstance she ends up in
California, makes a name for her work by taking photo portraits of rich
families. But she’s missing something, asks: “Am I using my eyes and my heart?”
This is now the time of the Great
Depression and one day Dorothea notices a bread line, a lone man with a
battered cup, the one for begging. She
takes photos, and her friends don’t understand. The book reads: “No one takes
photos of poor people.” She persists and travels, despite the leg pain and the
fatigue. She won’t let people forget, and the media publishes those pictures.
Just as I know the pictures, I bet you do, too. She is known to have started
the idea of documentary photography, was influential in several captures of
important parts of our history.
from Dorothea: “I know how to keep an
expression. . .that would draw no attention, so no one would look at me. I have
used that my whole life in photography. . . . I can turn it on or off. If I don’t
want anyone to see me I can make the kind of face so eyes go off me . . .
I was never obviously there.”
Barb Rosenstock offers additional important
back matter, a partial bibliography, books for further reading, some of Dorothea's famous photographs and a timeline.
Dorothea's first look at the bread lines, and that man with the cup. |
Many of her photographs at the Japanese Internment Camps have just been released. This link leads you to several photographs she took of her friend Charles M. Russell http://collections.centerofthewest.org/treasures/view/portrait_of_charles_m_russell
ReplyDeleteSuch a story it tells.
Thanks very much, Ruth. In the back information they did say that she wasn't able to publish those pictures from the internment camps. I didn't know that they still hadn't been released. I loved seeing Russell's work and studio in Cody, Wyoming.
DeleteAnother book I need to get! Thank you for the wonderful descriptions!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Loralee. It's a very good introduction to her life.
DeleteYou convinced me that I need this book. Great review, Linda!
ReplyDeleteJennifer
Thank you, Jennifer. Enjoy!
DeleteThis books looks amazing -- added to our TBR stack. I wrote about a photograph today - so your topic resonated with me. So much we can see in a photo. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteClare
Wonderful to hear about your photo, just what I love about reading everyone's posts. Thanks, Clare.
DeleteI've added this one to a list of books to get as well. What a beautiful way to teach students to capture stories.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kendra, I hope you will try the idea with your students and share the book, too.
DeleteOf course, this is a book for me to read. Thank you,Linda, for this treasure. Look what I found: https://youtu.be/hAeKTKMWpkM that you will be interested in taking a peek.
ReplyDeleteI thought that some of you would share other links, Carol. Thanks very much!
DeleteGosh Linda, you have so many wonderful recommendations. I wish I was still in the classroom with the kiddies to share all of them! However, I do share your titles with my "still working" friends ;-)
ReplyDeleteThanks Lynn, for sharing with your friends. I imagine you would like reading this story, too. Short, but there is a lot I didn't know about her.
DeleteWhat a powerful review. I love how this book can be used to inspire students to see the world though a passionate perspective. “Am I using my eyes and my heart?” What a thought. Knowing the story behind the pictures gives us an author's point of view. Not just the story they portray. Thank you, Linda.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Julieanne, I suspect your students would enjoy the challenge of finding an important picture themselves.
DeleteThank you for sharing another great book. I love all the great biographies that have been published that introduce students to people they should know. But especially how they reveal the personalities and passions of the person and open the world of possibilities to students who think "What can I do?"
ReplyDeleteI love what you wrote, opening the world of possibilities! The recent years have brought such wonderful stories of people we should know. Thanks.
DeleteWhat an amazing life and story. Can't wait to read it. Love how she needed to use both her eyes and heart.
ReplyDeleteYes, isn't that a lovely quote that Barb Rosenstock included? Thanks, Beverley.
DeleteSuch a fantastic story - I was familiar with her photography, but not her life! I'm so glad these stories are being told, stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things just by being themselves and being the best versions of themselves they could be.
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to see them told, too, Jane, enjoyed this one and so many others.
DeleteThis was my favorite pb biography I read this month. Something about her work just made an impact on me. And of course anyone who overcomes a physical disability has me cheering for them!!
ReplyDeleteAnd there is a poignant moment when after she was teased, her mother told her to try to act more natural. Yes, it's a great book, Michele.
DeleteOur fifth grade has one unit of inquiry about photography and how to use it to tell a story. This book is a great resource for this unit. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful that you have a unit of photography that focuses on story, Terje. I hope you enjoy the book!
DeleteI love her pictures, and I missed this book! Thank you Linda. I also love the idea of an inquiry unit that digs into photography and story telling. Lots of uses for this resource!
ReplyDeleteYes, I wish I could use the book, will have to try it myself! Thanks, Melanie.
DeleteI love picture book biographies and I love Dorthea Lange's work, so that match means I need to seek this book out. I'm so glad publishers are getting more books about artistic people.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Elsie. There have been some wonderful ones recently that I've loved. Hope you are able to find this one!
DeleteThe books you share are always so inspirational and make it to my TBR list. now have another to add. Thanks, Linda.
ReplyDeleteYou are so welcome, Bob. Glad to increase the pile!
DeleteI love what you say here Linda about many ways to communicate stories. I am going to get this book. I think it looks incredible.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed it quite a lot, and even more because I think students would be inspired by it. Thanks, Carrie.
DeleteWow - how did I not know about this book? Thanks for this wonderful review, Linda!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Tara, hope you find it good, too, and useful in class.
DeleteSounds like a neat book! I loved the title of your post. How important it is to "really look", and how rarely we do.
ReplyDeleteShe gave us all a gift forever, didn't she, Jennifer? It feels as if her childhood gave her "that" gift.
DeleteAly shared this book today as well--it looks so good! Cannot wait to read it.
ReplyDeleteI know she did, and we shared the same one last week! Hope you enjoy it too, Kellee.
DeleteI love the idea of kids telling stories through photos!
ReplyDeleteAnd the Library of Congress has some great Dorothea Lange primary sources. http://www.loc.gov/teachers/classroommaterials/themes/great-depression/index.html
http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/list/128_migm.html
Thanks, Annette, love the links for added information.
DeleteI have this one ordered and look forward to reading it. She was so wonderful at seeing people - really noticing and looking.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you ordered it, Crystal. I enjoyed the book very much.
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