Photo Journalism

The primary objective of this book is to analyze the role of visual reportage in the understanding of others, the world, and ourselves. The book approaches the subject matter from several perspectives.
One perspectives is to examine ideas underlying concepts of visual truth, particularly as conveyed by the news media. Chapters summarize and synthesize a number of relevant theories, ranging from surveillance theory to visual perception theory, looking for the origins of photojournalism in human biology and qulture as a way to understand the role of visual reportage in present and future life. A running theme throughout the book is that visual reportage encompasses a synergistic process involving photographers, subjects, editors, viewers, and society at large.
A second perspective is to synthesize and apply relevant research on photojournalism and reality imagery. Available research ranges from qualitative critiques of photography in 
general to quantitative experiments on the effects of camera angle on viewer perception. A third perspective, is to extend visual communication theory by proposing that we think in terms of an ecology of the visual for 21st-century life. The ecology places visual reportage within the repertoire of human visual behaviour and suggests a verbal and visual typology to facilitate discussion. The book concludes by outlining an appropriate, crucial role for photojournalism in the future development of humankind.
B.K. Deshpande is a free-lance photojournalist whose work has appeared in many national and international publications including National Geographic, Life, Forbes, Furtune, Time and Newsweek.
Deshpande has dedicated a large part of his 30-year career building an impressive portfolio of hi-tech stories on subjects as varied as virtual reality, insect robots, lightning, DNA fingerprinting, micromachines and solar power and solar cars. His commitment to photography means he spends most of the year on the road shooting a story or researching the next assignment. Much of his work is self-initiated: his award-winning coverage of the Kuwait oil well fires ran as a 26-page cover story and his photo essay of the civil war in Somalia was one of the first to hit the press.
As a photojournalist, Deshpande is constantly pushing himself to extremes in search of new and better angles, whether it’s rising at 4 a.m. to catch the early morning light of a camel fair in India, repealing the glass of Biosphere II, the space colony prototype in the Arizona desert, or shooting an eruption of the Mauna Loa volcano while the rubber soles of his boots melt. Deshpande has won numerous awards from the National Press Photographers Association, the World Press Photo Foundation and Communication Arts Magazine. His work has been exhibited at different parts of the world.

Preface

Photojournalism, at the beginning of the 21st century, finds itself at the proverbial crossroads: Will image-making technologies and public cynicism lead to its demise, or will journalists rise to the challenge by practicing a new, more credible form of visual journalism? From the time of its invention in the early 19th century, photography enjoyed the unparalleled credibility assumed through a mechanistic perception of a neutral, “mirror of nature” camera. By the beginning of the 20th century, photographs were being used as irrefutable evidence of the veracity of their manifest content, a position supported by empiricism, modernism, and the scientific method. Additionally, journalism’s deliberate move towards objectivity in mid-20th-century media culture underscored the value of photographic evidence. By the the 35-mm camera 1960s, photojournalism was flourishing had made the physical challenges of picture taking easier. printing advances had made publication of photographs a simpler matter, and news publications had begun to realize the informational and economic value of photographs.
Paradoxically, however, the physical sciences had already challenged the idea of an objective world “out there.” The development of quantum physics shifted all notions of reality, zooming in on the subjective nature of our comprehension of all things. Literary, art, and communication scholars echoed physicists’ concerns through their critiques of the scientific method and modernism itself. The photograph as an evidentiary document began to lose face in light of increased understanding of the subjective nature of visual representation. Constructionism, semiotics, and then deconstructionism offered new ways to interpret visual culture and human visual behaviour.
And if those issues were not enough to shake the ground of photojournalism’s raison d’être, digital imaging a genre technology, with its ability to flawlessly manipulate that was not supposed to be manipulated, did. Ethical and Time magazine in the 1980s and 1990s contributed to a blunders by such journalistic icons as National Geographic popular misconception that digital imaging is rapidly eroding any trust viewers or readers might still hold in journalistic media. Furthermore, such events as the paparazzi’s pursuit of Princess Diana the night of her death fueled the fires of public concern about the practice of photojournalism.
Yet, human beings continue to die from war, murder, natural disasters; to be born, now in litters as large as seven or eight; to live in harmony and conflict. Newspapers and photojournalism have survived the onslaught of electronic media, continuing to report the human maelstrom of a global citizenry as if it were a vivid reality play in the midst of the nonreality of turn-of-the-millennium culture. Almost drowned within media criticism have been the voices of those professionals whose appreciation of the subjective nature of observation and reportage has led to more sensitive and sophisticated practice of visual journalism. In daily practice, digital-imaging technology has led to increased awareness of the ease of manipulating visual reportage, in turn leading to higher-not lower-ethical standards. At the same time, new technology has made visual coverage faster, easier, and more prolific via digital distribution.
As a result, photojournalism at the beginning of the 21st century finds itself maturing beyond the naive idealism of early and mid-20th-century positivism, and even beyond the dark cynicism of late-20th-century post-modernism, toward a profound sense of purpose: Good visual reportage may very well be the only credible source of reasonably true images in decades to come. The heart of photojournalism is reporting human experience accurately, honestly, and with an overriding sense of social responsibility. The key to earning and maintaining public trust is increasing awareness of the process of visual reporting and its potential to inform or misinform. Drawing on an eclectic theoretical base grounded in classical ethics, surveillance theory, social constructionism, and visual perception, this book considers the symbiotic concerns of various travelers through the visual truth labyrinth: photographers, human subjects, editors, viewers, and society at large. Using an original typology of visual ethics ranging from visual embrace to visual suicide, the book examines visual reportage as a form of human visual behavior, concluding with a proposal for an “ecology of the visual” appropriate for the 21st century.

Contents

    Preface
Introduction
Photojournalism Basics
Critical Areas in Photojournalism
Major Concerns of Photojournalists
The Making of a Photojournalist
World Famous Photojournalists
Objectivity in Visual Journalism
Index
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