Search This Blog

Sunday, March 26, 2017

Restless Spirit: The Life and Work of Dorothea Lange, by Elizabeth Partridge -- Day 66



Writer Elizabeth Partridge’s photo-essay Restless Spirit: The Life and Work of Dorothea Lange is an unflinching look at a woman passionate about her work, an influential documentary photographer who captured insights into some of the most difficult periods in our country’s history. Lange is perhaps best known for her 1936 photograph “Migrant Mother” taken at a pea-pickers’ camp in Nipomo, California. This photo provided a searing glimpse of the conditions in which families were living as a result of westward migration during the Great Depression; it shamed the U.S. government into providing vital basic facilities to migrant workers. Having wanted to be “invisible” herself due to a life-long limp resulting from childhood polio, Lange strove to reveal the heart of her subjects’ lives as sensitively and respectfully as she could. Traveling the country as a photographer for the Farm Security Administration (FSA) in the 1930s, she often felt torn between her roles as wife-and-mother and professional photographer. In the 1940s she was asked by the U.S. government to document the effects of World War II on the home front, most notably Japanese internment camps. She did so unerringly, though her revealing photos were not available in the National Archives until 2006. Weaving tight the fabric of Lange’s life from her youth to her death in 1965, Partridge draws heavily on archival photographs, on Lange’s personal reflections and on her own memories, as Lange’s goddaughter, of the extended family to which Lange was so dedicated. This award-winning book is both biography and history – and wonderful reading. Ages 12 to adult.

An excellent picture book biography for younger readers is Dorothea's Eyes: Dorothea Lange Photographs the Truth, by Barb Rosenstock, illustrated by Gerard DuBois. Many elements of Lange's personal and work life are captured and highlighted visually by bold text, evocative paintings, a few of Lange's iconic photos and a timeline. Ages 8-11.