Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2002/11/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Folks, Good discussion regarding propaganda vs. documentary. Since I've read a lot about Walker Evans, and so also learned a bit about the Historical Section of the Resettlement Administration, later absorbed by the Farm Security Administration, let me add a few things. Yes, the day to day purpose of the project was to document the challenges faced by farmers and residents of small towns during a period of economic collapse, and promote the successes of RA policies, by providing images to the hungry photo news magazines. The new medium of photo-reportage was an excellent way to share the reality of lives that were invisible to much of the populace and generate support for helping them out. It was also the time when the transition from the old agrarian life was being replaced by industrialization, and farming was being corporatized and moved west. So it was a perfect opportunity to generate an archive of photos depicting that transition and documenting the old ways before they disappeared. It's pretty plain that both ideas were considered important, with the propaganda aspect growing as the New Deal programs were being challenged by reactionaries in Congress, and the Historical Section itself was pressed for funds. (Some things never change.) To varying degrees, the photographers charted their own courses between what was asked of them and what they delivered. The mandate was quite loosely defined most of the time. Evans set the stylistic tenor of the project and was also influential in forming it's concepts. He made it plain - - "No Politics whatever;" the value of the archive, for propaganda or history, would be it's artistic/documentary integrity. We once had a government that would consider such a thing. Evans had his own aesthetic and historical agenda, and eventually lost the job because he refused to do the hack work the agency needed. Lange and others were more socially/politically motivated, believing their work could make a difference, and they set out to do so. Many would have whether they were RA employees or not. They were a part of a very broad trend of artists, composers and writers who heard the same call, when many hoped that the moment held the opportunity to create a more just society. These weren't people with a uniform shared ideology, though many were branded as generic pinkos by later historical rewrites. (Some things never change.) That the work sometimes betrayed biases in the way it contrived to tell a story or portray a symbol does not mean that there was anything purposely false or dishonest (a secondary definition for propaganda?) in what was put out to the public. We know how hard it is to control the narrative a viewer will put to a photograph. It's not really a very good use for photography, but the medium was still young and such things as endemic manipulation weren't (aren't!) sorted out. At the time, Photographs were considered Truth, the words virtually sonominous. And, the content of the work released by the HS was considered, and intended to be, honest. Until, that is, the great skeleton caper. It's worth looking up the story in detail, but to summarize: Arthur Rothstein found the sun-bleached skull of a steer and carried it around to use as an exposure reference, a white card. Eventually, it appeared in a photo of the parched floor of the Badlands, and what a perfect bit of symbolism it seemed to an editor back in Washington. They sent it out and it was published. That's when it hit the fan. You won't find cattle in the Badlands! Political enemies howled and had a field day, calling into question the honesty and motivations of the project, liberally deploying the P word, using the innocent indiscretion as a weapon against FDR. (Some things never change!) Clearly it was a mistake, but not poor Arthur's. Anyway, if anyone is still awake, I wanted to fill in a little history in case you didn't know about it. The project had a higher purpose than simply waving the pendent of the FSA or polishing the lustre of Roosevelt. Many of the contradictions the HS project encountered are still faced today every time we use a camera to document. All the truth a photo can contain will not prevent it's use as propaganda. Carl - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html