From Publishers Weekly
In her recent book Regarding the Pain of Others, Susan Sontag concludes that an aesthetic reaction is part of the viewer's experience of even shots of extreme pain or violence. Written more than 10 years ago, the lead piece of these 18 essays on photography weighs in on aestheticization and also finds that, even in "social documentary" photographs, "aestheticization" is one of the ways that disparate peoples recognize themselves in one another." Yet despite the similar subject matter and terminology, poet and critic Levi Strauss carves out unique and convincing critical terrain in this follow-up to Between Dog and Wolf, his previous collection of critical meditations. Most of these pieces were written during the '90s and published as review essays on the work of Ania Bien, Miguel Rio Branco, Alfredo Jaar, Joel-Peter Witkin, Francesca Woodman and others; also included are an interview with painter Leon Golub (who works from photographs) and an introduction from critical eminence John Berger. "Photography and Propaganda," a study of the work and deaths in '80s Central America of photojournalists Richard Cross and John Hoagland, should be required reading in the age of embeddedness, and "Photography and Belief" is a terrific meditation on truth in the age of digital manipulation, which leads to an investigation of why many people thought images of September 11 "looked like a movie." Thoughtful and firm, these reflections seem more vital than ever.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
"Tackling subjects that range from photography and propaganda to the imagery of dreams, epic social documents to personal photographic revelations, Between the Eyes comprises eighteen of Strauss's persuasive and poetic writings on photography and photographers, accompanied by numerous black and white illustrations." --HotShoe International
"From true stories of optimistic photographers struggling to use their craft to help the oppressed, to the stunning impact that cameras any layperson can easily use have had upon photography as a whole, Between The Eyes is an insightful, contemplative, tightly written set of discussions, illustrated with a handful of well-chosen photographic images." --Bookwatch
"Contradictions at the heart of photography, such as the camera's capacity to salvage beauty from dreadful situations, come in for serious reflection in Between the Eyes: Essays on Photography and Politics by former San Franciscan David Levi Strauss." --The San Francisco Chronicle
"All photographs become a query sent out into the world, their effect unknown. In Strauss's own query, politics is not politics as usual. It is that place where being and society converge, powerfully expressed in the passion of the photographer's own aesthetic. Strauss makes a compelling case for still believing in the truth of photography." -- Shawn O'Sullivan --B&W Magazine
"...in essence, truth is what Strauss' essays are about: the sad truth about the limitations of the news media, the horrible truth about the proliferation of land mines in Cambodia and the devastation unleashed on its people, and the pathetic truth about the scandal of silence that surrounded the massacres in Rwanda in 1994... The truth can be a tough read, but do read this book--it is an eye-opener." --THE Magazine