Photography and Citizenship: The Art and Politics of The Family of Man
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Author: Zamir, Shamoon
Curated by Edward Steichen, 'The Family of Man', an exhibition of some 500 photographs from around the world first shown at the Museum of Modern Art in 1955, was the most globally successful art event of the cultural Cold War, with an attendance of some 10 million by the tour’s end in 1962. Though much has been written about the exhibition, it remains an event that is poorly understood. 'Photography and Citizenship' offers radically new readings of the cultural work accomplished by the exhibition and of Steichen’s aesthetic achievement. 'The Family of Man' was not, as has so often been argued, a retreat from politics into the comforts of a universalist humanism. Instead, Steichen tapped into the prevalent discourse of “the human condition” as well as the aspirations for an emergent post-war world order to fashion a pedagogy of liberal democratic and cosmopolitan citizenship.
ISBN 9788836662807. Silvana Editoriale. hb. 280 pages. colour ills. 29.8 x 24.1 cm.
not yet published
Curated by Edward Steichen, 'The Family of Man', an exhibition of some 500 photographs from around the world first shown at the Museum of Modern Art in 1955, was the most globally successful art event of the cultural Cold War, with an attendance of some 10 million by the tour’s end in 1962. Though much has been written about the exhibition, it remains an event that is poorly understood. 'Photography and Citizenship' offers radically new readings of the cultural work accomplished by the exhibition and of Steichen’s aesthetic achievement. 'The Family of Man' was not, as has so often been argued, a retreat from politics into the comforts of a universalist humanism. Instead, Steichen tapped into the prevalent discourse of “the human condition” as well as the aspirations for an emergent post-war world order to fashion a pedagogy of liberal democratic and cosmopolitan citizenship.
ISBN 9788836662807. Silvana Editoriale. hb. 280 pages. colour ills. 29.8 x 24.1 cm.
not yet published