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American Sports, 1970: Or How We Spent the War in Vietnam [Hardcover]

Tod Papageorge (Photographer)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 1, 2008
Coolly observational yet intensely engaging, the immensely influential American photographer Tod Papageorge's American Sports, 1970 draws a subtle but sharp parallel between the war in Vietnam and the American attitude toward spectator sports during a time of conflict. In 1970, a watershed year for popular opinion against the war, Papageorge was awarded a Guggenheim Foundation grant. His ostensible subject--sports and its role in American life--quickly became charged with the political, racial and sexual conflicts ignited by the war. Each and every picture is electric with disquiet. Military men in uniform parade across a field or relax in the stands. Cheerleaders rehearse beneath the gaze of the police. A couple sprawls and embraces in the debris of the Indianapolis 500. And hundreds of fans are drawn in unsettling group portraits at various stadiums and in the stands of many classic American sporting events.
Papageorge eloquently and palpably captures the civic and psychic distress of the time on the faces of his subjects and in their gestures and interactions. This is a remarkable, unexpected body of work--published here for the first time--by an artist and teacher who has shaped the creative efforts of many of the most influential American photographers of the past three decades.

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American Sports, 1970: Or How We Spent the War in Vietnam + Passing Through Eden: Photographs of Central Park + Core Curriculum: Writings on Photography (Aperture Ideas)
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. On his 1970 Guggenheim Fellowship, Papageorge sought to document as clearly and as completely as possible the phenomena of professional sport in America. To Papageorge, the theater of spectator and sport is comprised of a thousand brief acts. This collection mostly shows audiences taking in America's greatest pastimes—baseball and football—on campuses and in professional parks throughout 1970, the year that 4,221 American troops died in the Vietnam War and four students were killed at Kent State University. This politically tense year in American history is captured from the sidelines in photographs with formal elegance and hilarious happenstance that reveal the country's escapist tendencies. In one image, competing newspaper headlines say it all: Baltimore Wins First One leads the Cincinnati Post, whereas the Kentucky Post reports on a Secret attempt to buy city hall, suggesting radically different ideas of what is worth noticing and reporting. Many of Papageorge's photos reveal people either intensely watching or paying no attention whatsoever, but it is Papageorge who invites us to look and look closely at a majorette's baton, lines that separate spectators from police and the head of a veteran's memorial that nearly vanishes into a tree. The results are utterly absorbing and seamless in their poetry. 70 b&w photos. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

"In these powerful images he captured the undercurrent of negotiated violence inherent in sports while referencing a war taking place half a world away. Whether the playing field is full of clowns, drum majorettes or the players themselves, the bleachers are held in thrall. This is a hard look at we the people during a time that was a turning point in America's self-image." -- Shawn O'Sullivan --B&W: Black & White Magazine

"There is plenty of testosterone-fuelled posturing, languid boredom, pomp and parade, brief clashes of flesh and bone and blood, bad food, girls, medals, rampant sexism, farce and false bravado - in other words, the stuff of war, packaged and primped for the 'folks back home'." -- Paul Graham --Photoworks

"He describes his pictures as 'rattingly dense,' and their disorderliness can be off-putting; you don't know where to look. But Papageorge does. Without attempting to bring order to chaos, he frames it so that our ricocheting eye always finds a place to rest." -- Vince Aletti --Photograph magazine

"Providing a stark contrast to the experience of America's young soldiers nearly half a world away, these enraptured fans might also serve as an analogy. In Papageorge's eyes, even our national pastime has failed to relieve us from the discontents of war." -- Joshua Chuang --Yale Alumni Magazine

"[the book] captures the jingoism of America in the 1970s through a wide-angle lens. Crowds of spectators at sporting events form eerie evidence of a nation embroiled in war." --Joshua Chuang

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 128 pages
  • Publisher: Aperture; 1 edition (January 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1597110507
  • ISBN-13: 978-1597110501
  • Product Dimensions: 10.8 x 12 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,113,107 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A unique and highly recommended addition, April 4, 2008
This review is from: American Sports, 1970: Or How We Spent the War in Vietnam (Hardcover)
Founded in 1952 by Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, Barbara Morgan, Minor White, Beaumont Newhall, and Nancy Newhall, Apeture (a non-profit foundation dedicated to advancing photography in all of its forms and formats) has been a premier publisher in the field of photography and photographic studies. Their newest coffee table compendium showcases the black-and-white photographic skills of Tod Papageorge in "American Sports, 1970: Or How We Spend The War In Vietnam". A compilation of photographs taken over the course of 1970 while American men and women were fighting and dying in the jungles of Vietnam, the American homefront was plunged into political chaos, campus violence, and a rapidly diminishing enthusiasm for the war. At the same time, Americans were attending their usual rounds of sporting events and it is these that were captured by the photographic lens of Tod Papageorge. In a time of political turbulence and social unrest, nothing was to stand between the fans and their favorite pastimes. "American Sports, 1970" is a unique and highly recommended addition to personal, academic, and community library American 20th Century Photographic Studies" reference collections.
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4.0 out of 5 stars 1970's captured randomly!, December 21, 2008
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This review is from: American Sports, 1970: Or How We Spent the War in Vietnam (Hardcover)
Great collection of candid shots from the 70's from a lesser known but masterful photographer, checkout Passing Though Eden from Papageorge as well, a better but quite different book.
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