Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/05/12
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 12:52 PM -0600 5/12/04, Tim Atherton wrote: > > When fiction comes to the party masquerading as fact, truth goes home >> early. >> >> B. D. > >and > >> But, Phong, to write fiction and pass it off as true would be >> just as wrong >> as staging a documentary photograph. That's how several journalists have >> gotten in trouble lately. There should be a definite line between truth >> and fiction in writing just as there should be between staged and >> documentary photographs. > >I think perhaps "There should be a definite line between truth >and fiction in writing" might be better put as "...a line between fact and >fiction"? > >Truth and fiction (in writing or in photography) are not really mutually >exclusive - many a work of fiction or of art conveys more truth about an >event or situation than all the available documentaries or journalism - >whether those work's are "factually" accurate or not. > >Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother or Picasso's Guernica perhaps convey more >truth about the dustbowl/depression and the Spanish Civil War than any >number of news accounts - even though one was "directed/posed" and the other >is obviously a work of artistic imagination - and neither may be factually >completely correct or accurate. > >tim > Well said, Tim! -- * Henning J. Wulff /|\ Wulff Photography & Design /###\ mailto:henningw@archiphoto.com |[ ]| http://www.archiphoto.com