July 5: Week in Photography
Your lens to the internet's most powerful photographs. 📸 MOST POWERFUL PHOTO OF THE WEEK 📸 Tayfun Coskun / Anadolu Agency / Getty Images This is what democracy looks like. On one side, you have the organizations that enforce the current power structure — the police, the government — and on the other, you have the people; each side stands in response to the other. The people, seen here as messy, rowdy, colorful, and chaotic, have the power of numbers on their side, while the police, which have the force of structure and organization, are behind defenses, as if afraid of the people. It is important to note that the press is in between, as a liaison, an impartial observer, to hold each side accountable and make sure that the story is told accurately.
📸For Your 👀 Only: A LOOK BACK AT THE HOMELAND Things feel fraught right now, but then, hasn't that always been the case? This week we spoke with Nina Berman, who has been covering the intersection of American culture and the military for almost two decades. Her work, which includes photography and the film Triumph of the Shill, is critical of the normalization of military force and the abuse of power within our society and begs citizens to pay attention.
My answer may surprise you. I have not been out on the streets every day photographing the protests in New York City. I have been feeling like this is not necessarily the story that I need to be telling, and I don’t want to be in the way of younger photographers, and Black and brown photographers, who might feel the urgency more deeply.
HOW DO YOU PICK YOUR PROJECTS? Generally speaking, I am interested in how power manifests itself, whether that's military power, police power, a power involving perpetrators and survivors, corporate power, and how people resist. I’m also interested in how propaganda works and is used to manufacture consent and build support around sometimes preposterous ideologies. I have some ideas around police violence that are different from what I’ve done in the past, which has been attending funerals, protests, looking at stop-and-frisk, things like that, but weirdly these ideas don’t really connect so much to traditional still photography. Nina Berman I'm kind of frustrated by still photography — it’s beautiful and brilliant, but it's limited, and especially when you’re aiming to tell more complex fuller stories. If you look at my career, I think you’ll see a movement into video, a movement into combining pictures and text and documents.
WHAT ADVICE DO YOU HAVE FOR THE YOUNG CREATORS WHO ARE OUT THERE NOW? People become photographers so that they can live in the moment, which is a tremendous high and hugely valuable to you as your creation as a human being — to live, to witness, to see things in the moment. So they should go out and do that, but they should also understand the language that has come before them, so that they can be creative trailblazers.
Nina Berman CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOUR PROJECT HOMELAND? Homeland came about because of my inability to decipher what I was seeing and hearing as a resident of Manhattan post-Sept. 11. I was wondering, is it safe to take the subway, should I be scared or is there a terrorist on every corner and wondering where all of sudden these voices in my head were coming from.
I don’t use the word “hope.” It's not really something that I think about. You’re expected to answer yes, but really, the answer is no. I am not hopeful. I am seeing a future that is going to be super deadly.
Nina Berman ANY FINAL THOUGHTS? There has been a lot of conversation around whether journalists should be allowed to show the faces of protesters, and there is this sense that somehow we journalists are putting people at risk. If there is evidence, show me.
Social movements are inspired by the visuals of other social movements. When people started protesting in Minneapolis, people around the country started doing the same thing because they saw those pictures. And it was journalists who made those pictures, along with regular people, but journalists were broadcasting them constantly and telling those stories, so do not go and attack journalists or else you’re just feeding into the Trump machine. 📸THE WEEK'S PHOTO STORIES FROM BUZZFEED NEWS 📸 It's officially summer, albeit a somewhat weird one, with some states opening, some states closing, and no one much in the mood for the 4th of July. We're trying to balance serious news with some escapism, and hope that you're doing the same.
Find more of the week's best photo stories here.
DELIGHTFULLY ODD PHOTOS FROM FOURTH OF JULY HISTORY Ralph Crane / Getty Images
HAUNTING COLOR PICTURES OF THE 1918 FLU PANDEMIC Getty Images
📸SOME HOPE 📸 Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images Oli Scarff / AFP / Getty Images
"That's it from us this time — see you next week!" —Gabriel and Kate "All photographs are accurate. None of them is the truth.” — Richard Avedon
📝 This letter was edited and brought to you by the News Photo team. Gabriel Sanchez is the photo essay editor based in New York and loves cats. Kate Bubacz is the photo director based in New York and loves dogs. You can always reach us here.
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