From Library Journal
Rather than making broad surveys, the current trend in photo-historical research is a more narrow approach, closely examining specific groups. Willis (Reflections in Black) and Williams (The Underground Railroad, etc.) continue on this track. They concentrate not only on images of women but exclusively at the black female form in photographs beginning in the 19th century. Willis and Williams's approach is theoretical, focusing on issues of race, gender, sexuality, and social class by looking at images of the objectified black female in a variety of representations. The book is divided into four main chapters "Colonial Conquest," "The Cultural Body," "The Body Beautiful," and "Reclaiming Bodies and Images" and includes over 200 images by important photographers, such James Van Der Zee, Gordon Parks, and Carrie Mae Weems, as well as by many unknowns. The book provides a fascinating view into a long-neglected and even taboo subject. Another recent text, Kathleen Thompson's The Face of Our Past: Images of Black Women from Colonial America to the Present, is similar but focuses on inspirational imagery, and Willis's earlier work Reflections in Black offers a more comprehensive survey of black photography. Still, the current volume is highly recommended for any library interested in expanding its black history, photo history, and women's studies collections. Shauna Frischkorn, Millersville Univ., PA
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"This publication--copiously illustrated and rigorously researched--demonstrates the complexities of deconstructing images of females of African descent within the medium of photography. Deborah Willis and Carla Williams demonstrate how the paradigm of the gaze, the idioms of subjectivity, agency and identity, and the modality of the observer versus the observed falter in the case of black women--slave/free, gay/straight, worker/bourgeoisie--and mutate when race and economics interface with gender and sexual preference. This invaluable study will be the starting point for future research and will explode the consciousness of practitioner, subject and patron with regard to the politics of imagery." --Lowery Stokes Sims, PhD, Director, The Studio Museum in Harlem "Deborah Willis and Carla Williams are uniquely qualified guides to the taboo subject of the black female body. As highly educated black women who are also trained artists they bring an informed and sensitive perspective to a subject that has never before been studied from a historical and aesthetic viewpoint. They have sleuthfully pursued images of black women in collections around the world and have gathered the very best and most important examples into this anthology. As good historians they use the past as a map for the present. We find reproduced and analyzed here examples from the earliest photographs of black women by European photographers of the 1840s, to Edward Weston in California of the 1930s, to Lorna Simpson in New York of the 1990s. It will be a long time before this book is surpassed." --Weston Naef, Curator of Photographs, The J. Paul Getty Museum "A fascinating and complex journey through a heretofore unlit passage of the history of photography. Well-documented for scholarly use but highly readable. Recommended for anyone interested in a broader understanding of the powerful relationship between representation and culture." --Katherine C. Ware, Curator of Photographs, The Philadelphia Museum of Art "The Black Female Body: A Photographic History, with its superlative introductory essay by Deborah Willis and Carla Williams, impacts many of our conventional views, and it does so with substantial force. An astonishing collection of previously unfamiliar images, the book compels us to re-imagine much of what we thought we knew about African and African American history and culture." --Henry Louis Gates, Jr., W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of the Humanities, Harvard University "The Black Female Body: A Photographic History is an invaluable source book for artists and scholars who are interested in how image technologies have shaped our vision of the world and its inhabitants. Some of the photographs in the book are well known while others emerge for public viewing for the first time in decades. Still, the power of this book lies in the editors' efforts to bring all these photographs together and assess the multiple relationships among them. In doing so they have uncovered a racial grammar that runs across genres, continents, and historical periods. This is truly groundbreaking work." --Coco Fusco, Associate Professor School of the Arts, Columbia University "[A] meticulous presentation of old photos...urging a reevaluation of the modes and means by which the iconic figure of the black female body has been constructed." --Camerawork: A Journal of Photographic Arts