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39. Integration 1 Writing Assignment to Online Magazine
At the time of the Louisville flood. 1937
Margaret Bourke-White
Margaret Bourke-White was an American photographer
and photo journalist. She was born in the Bronx, New York
in 1906. She studied at Columbia University, and while
there she was interested in photograph. After switching
colleges several times, she started her career as an indus-
trial photographer at the Otis Steel Company. In 1930, she
became the first Western photographer allowed into the
Soviet Union, and was the first female photo journalist for
Life Magazine.
There’s a girl looks like White on the left edge of
the photo, but actually she is an African American.
Because of this photo is black and white print, and
She took a picture of the Fort
the shade of people is quite similar, you might
recognize African American people as white.
Peck Dam as a construction
photographer, and this photograph became an iconic image that it was
featured as he 1930’s representative to the United States Postal Serv-
ice’s Celebrate the Century series of commemorative postage stamps.
As the photo journalist “My insatiable desire to be on the scene when
Student’s Writing
Dam, Fort Peck, Montana,
history was being made was never more nearly fulfilled.” she wrote in November 23, 1936
According to a United States
her book. Bourke-White’s way of grasp the subject, classical composi- Army Corps of Engineers Web
page, this photo is actually a
tion, and refined sensitivity to the human condition combined to create photo of the spillway located
three miles east of the dam al-
remarkable photographs. though she titled it ‘New Deal,
Montana: Fort Peck Dam‘.
I think this photograph tells us how African American were suffering at this time. They are mak-
ing a line for something, such as for food, job, bus, and so on, in front of billboard that shows
“the American life”. However A white family look very happy in their car, and are driving for
somewhere with smile, they were just waiting regarding it as unimaginable thing. At the same
time, I feel the strength of African American people. No one hang their head, but look straight
ahead. Margaret tellingly encapsulate the history of America’s ironic moment.
Mahatma Gandhi, April
Dan Weiner
1946
Shoppers Glimpse a Movie Star at Grand
Central Station, New York. 1953
Comparing Margaret’s photo with Dan’s,
you can see the difference between white
Hood’s chapel, Georgia,
and African American why they are mak-
1936
ing a queue.
40. Integration 1 Writing Assignment to Online Magazine
At the time of the Louisville flood. 1937
Margaret Bourke-White
Margaret Bourke-White was an American photographer
and photo journalist. She was born in the Bronx, New York
in 1906. She studied at Columbia University, and while
there she was interested in photograph. After switching
colleges several times, she started her career as an indus-
trial photographer at the Otis Steel Company. In 1930, she
became the first Western photographer allowed into the
Soviet Union, and was the first female photo journalist for
Life Magazine.
There’s a girl looks like White on the left edge of
the photo, but actually she is an African American.
Because of this photo is black and white print, and
She took a picture of the Fort
the shade of people is quite similar, you might
recognize African American people as white.
Peck Dam as a construction
photographer, and this photograph became an iconic image that it was
featured as he 1930’s representative to the United States Postal Serv-
ice’s Celebrate the Century series of commemorative postage stamps.
As the photo journalist “My insatiable desire to be on the scene when
Student’s Writing
Dam, Fort Peck, Montana,
history was being made was never more nearly fulfilled.” she wrote in November 23, 1936
According to a United States
her book. Bourke-White’s way of grasp the subject, classical composi- Army Corps of Engineers Web
page, this photo is actually a
tion, and refined sensitivity to the human condition combined to create photo of the spillway located
three miles east of the dam al-
remarkable photographs. though she titled it ‘New Deal,
Montana: Fort Peck Dam‘.
I think this photograph tells us how African American were suffering at this time. They are mak-
ing a line for something, such as for food, job, bus, and so on, in front of billboard that shows
“the American life”. However A white family look very happy in their car, and are driving for
somewhere with smile, they were just waiting regarding it as unimaginable thing. At the same
time, I feel the strength of African American people. No one hang their head, but look straight
ahead. Margaret tellingly encapsulate the history of America’s ironic moment.
Mahatma Gandhi, April
Dan Weiner
1946
Shoppers Glimpse a Movie Star at Grand
Central Station, New York. 1953
Comparing Margaret’s photo with Dan’s,
you can see the difference between white
Hood’s chapel, Georgia,
and African American why they are mak-
1936
ing a queue.