Photographs by W. Eugene Smith
Illustrated biography by Ben Maddow
Afterword by John G. Morris
Let Truth Be The Prejudice documents the life and work of W. Eugene Smith, a man whose work expanded the range and depth of photography, bringing new aesthetic and moral power to the photo essay. Smith was born in 1918 in Wichita, Kansas, and raised according to traditional American values, believing in the nobility of America and the injustice of war. He began taking pictures with his mother's camera while still a boy and continued this practice throughout his schooling. In 1937 his burning ambition took him to New York City, where his rise as a professional photographer was meteoric.
Before he was twenty-one, Smith had placed hundreds of photographs in the major picture magazines of the time. Dramatic composition, a hard-edged brilliance, and a mastery of lighting were evident even in this early work. But the moment of true ground-breaking would occur during World War II. It was when Smith went ashore with the Marines at Saipan, Guam, and Iwo Jima that his work and his sense of moral responsibility came together. He wrote: "Each time I pressed the shutter release it was a shouted condemnation hurled with the hope that they might echo through the minds of men in the future-- causing them caution and remembrance and realization." Breaking from the concerns of the mass media, his personal priorities were born. Smith's war photographs earned him repeated and justified comparisons to Mathew Brady. His coverage of American prisoner-of-war camps helped convince the Japanese that their fears were exaggerated, and stopped the suicide of thousands of terrified citizens upon the advance of American troops. This would not be the last time that Smith's work would change as well as document history.
After the war, Smith became a staff photographer at Life magazine, where he created many of his most famous photographs. The essays "Country Doctor" and "Nurse Midwife" influenced an entire generation. Smith moved from mine villages in Great Britain to Albert Schweitzer in French Equatorial Africa to a sweeping study of Spanish village life. At a meeting of the Ku Klux Klan he created haunting images of hatred, fear, and bigotry, which beautifully counterpoint the humanity of his great Life0 essays. Smith also showed his skill at portraiture, shooting many of the luminaries of the time.
His frustrations with commercial publishing finally led to a split with Life magazine in 1954, a true case of "artistic differences." He devoted his remaining twenty-four years to independent projects. It was a period of intense personal suffering and poverty. During these years he pushed one project, "Pittsburgh," virtually to the breaking point and along the way created photography's greatest urban landscape.
His last great essay, "Minamata," depicted both the human suffering caused by mercury poisoning in a Japanese industrial port, and helped put an end to that pollution. A severe beating by factory thugs aggravated his already failing health and on October 15, 1978, he died. Over the span of forty driven years, Smith dreamed on an epic scale and his accomplishments were heroic. He once wrote: "Never have I found the limits of the photographic potential. Every horizon, upon being reached, reveals another beckoning in the distance. Always, I am on the threshold."
Here is the definitive work on Smith's life and work, containing his major photo-essays, the portrait work, and spanning his brilliant career from his days aboard an aircraft carrier, through the breadth of Pittsburgh, to the human suffering explicit in his last great essay in Minamata. All these images have been painstakingly reproduced to insure the greatest quality in testament to Smith's genius.
Moral passion and photographic truth were inseparable to Gene Smith. He pursued both and the measure of his greatness is that he compromised neither. His achievements were realized at no small cost to himself and those around him. In the accompanying biography, "The Wounded Angel," author Ben Maddow takes the measure of the man and looks unflinchingly at the muses and demons that drove W. Eugene Smith to the fulfillment of his dream of greatness. Maddow's biography is the first published in-depth portrayal of Gene Smith's life. It is a dramatic saga made all the more vivid by Maddow's commitment to the facts and his subject.
评分
评分
评分
评分
这本书的叙事节奏把握得堪称教科书级别。作者似乎深谙如何在一片看似平静的湖面上投下石子,激起的涟漪层层推进,直到最终掀起巨浪。故事的开端,那些日常生活的琐碎描写,非但没有拖沓之感,反而像是一层层精心铺设的底色,为后续的爆发积蓄着能量。我特别欣赏作者在人物心理刻画上的细腻,那些细微的犹豫、转瞬即逝的眼神交流,都像是被高倍显微镜捕捉到的细节,精准地反映了角色内心的挣扎与蜕变。随着情节的深入,悬念的设置也愈发巧妙,总是在你以为一切都尘埃落定之时,抛出一个意想不到的转折,让人不得不暂停思考,回溯之前的种种伏笔。这种结构上的精妙,使得阅读体验充满了探索的乐趣,仿佛在解一个精心设计的迷宫,每走一步都充满了对未知出口的期待。即便是那些看似不经意的配角,也拥有着丰满的背景和清晰的动机,共同编织成了一张巨大而复杂的社会图景,让人在阅读过程中不断反思人性的复杂面貌。
评分我必须得说,这本书的后劲儿太大了。它不是那种读完合上书就立刻忘记的快消品,而是像一根细小的刺,扎在心底,时不时地提醒你它的存在。这种后劲儿主要来源于它对人性中那些“灰色地带”的无情揭示。它没有提供廉价的安慰或简单的答案,相反,它把那些最难直面的矛盾和选择,赤裸裸地摆在了我们面前。那些看似坚不可摧的道德准则,在极端的压力下如何崩塌瓦解;那些深藏的、连自己都不愿承认的私心是如何驱动行为的,都被刻画得入木三分。读完之后,我发现自己对周围的人和事产生了一种新的审视角度,不再轻易站队或下结论,而是开始理解每一种行为背后必然存在的、复杂且常常是矛盾的动因。它迫使读者进行深刻的自我反省,思考自己的立场是否真的站得住脚。这是一部真正能让人“成长”的作品,尽管这种成长的过程或许伴随着些许的不适。
评分如果用一种颜色来形容这部作品给我的整体感受,那一定是深邃的蓝,带着一丝不易察觉的锈红。它不是那种直白的、热烈的宣泄,而是一种沉淀后的、内敛的情感爆发。文字的质感非常独特,读起来有一种磨砂纸般的粗粝感,但同时又蕴含着丝绸般的光泽。作者的遣词造句充满了诗意,但这种诗意绝非空洞的辞藻堆砌,而是紧密地服务于氛围的营造。很多段落,我都需要反复阅读,不是因为难以理解,而是因为那些句子本身就像是微缩的艺术品,值得细细品味其结构和韵律。尤其是一些环境描写的段落,那些对光影、气味、声音的捕捉,构建了一个极具沉浸感的空间,让人仿佛能闻到空气中潮湿的味道,听到远方传来的模糊人声。这种文学性的深度,让这本书超越了单纯的故事叙述,上升到了对存在、时间以及记忆的哲学探讨层面。
评分从主题的广度来看,这本书的野心着实不小。它并没有将焦点局限在某一个单一的冲突上,而是巧妙地将个人命运与宏大的历史背景、社会思潮编织在一起。每一次角色的抉择,都仿佛是站在一个时代的十字路口,承担着沉重的时代重量。我尤其被其中对于“身份认同”的探讨所触动,那种在传统与现代、集体与自我之间拉扯的痛苦与挣扎,被描绘得淋漓尽致。书中对不同阶层人们生活状态的观察,也极其敏锐和公正,没有明显的道德审判,只有冷静的记录和深刻的同情。这使得整部作品的格局一下子打开了,它不再只是关于几个主角的故事,而是变成了一面映照我们所处世界的棱镜,折射出无数条相互交织的可能性和不可避免的悲剧性。阅读完毕后,我花了很长时间才从那种广阔的思考中抽离出来,这种持久的影响力,是真正优秀作品的标志。
评分这本书最让我感到惊喜的是它在叙事视角的转换上所展现出的灵活性和掌控力。作者似乎游刃有余地穿梭于不同的意识流之间,有时是局内人的焦灼,有时是上帝视角的冷静,甚至偶尔还会出现一些跳跃的、碎片化的闪回片段。这种多焦点的叙述方式,虽然对读者的专注度提出了更高的要求,但回报也是巨大的——它极大地丰富了故事的层次感。通过这种不断切换的视角,作者成功地揭示了“真相”的相对性,同一事件在不同人眼中会呈现出截然不同的面貌,这本身就构成了一种强有力的批判。我喜欢那种被引导着去拼凑完整画面的过程,就像一个考古学家在发掘古老的遗迹,每一个新发现的碎片都可能彻底改变你对整体结构的理解。这种叙事技巧的成熟运用,使得阅读过程变成了一场智力上的盛宴,而非被动的接收信息。
评分 评分 评分 评分 评分本站所有内容均为互联网搜索引擎提供的公开搜索信息,本站不存储任何数据与内容,任何内容与数据均与本站无关,如有需要请联系相关搜索引擎包括但不限于百度,google,bing,sogou 等
© 2026 book.quotespace.org All Rights Reserved. 小美书屋 版权所有