Fr. 66.00

Report to the Shareholders

Anglais · Livre Relié

Paraît le 30.10.2025

Description

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So much is uncertain and changing in America. One thing that is clear, however, is the pattern of industrialization which exploits a region and its people before moving on when economics change. The Rust Belt of America provided the manpower and factories that formed the backbone of American manufacturing, which became a juggernaut of the twentieth century. Yet when conditions shifted, companies quietly left. Despite decades of coverage of Rust Belt communities, their demise and struggles, there is a continuing need to document the region. Ken Light's images in this book show the vestiges of the industrial past: abandoned factories, decaying infrastructure and disused machinery. The cities he visited struggle with high unemployment and massive population decline, testament to vanishing economic opportunities. Abandoned and angered by the political system, citizens feel left behind by a business class that offshored the production of goods and forsook them without a second thought. Report to the Shareholders weaves the proud heritage of blue-collar communities into this saga alongside striking historical ephemera that brings the black-and-white images of the present into high relief. The result is a poignant and persuasive visual journey through the Rust Belt, asking the question: how did we let this happen?

A propos de l'auteur

Ken Light is a social documentary photographer with a particular focus on America. His books include To The Promised Land (1988), Texas Death Row (1997) and Valley of Shadows and Dreams (2012). Light has exhibited internationally, including solo shows at the International Center of Photography in New York, the Oakland Museum of California and the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester. Among his awards are two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, a Dorothea Lange Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Light is the Reva and David Logan Professor of Photojournalism at the University of California, Berkeley. Steidl has published his Course of the Empire (2021).

Résumé

So much is uncertain and changing in America. One thing that is clear, however, is the pattern of industrialization which exploits a region and its people before moving on when economics change. The Rust Belt of America provided the manpower and factories that formed the backbone of American manufacturing, which became a juggernaut of the twentieth century. Yet when conditions shifted, companies quietly left. Despite decades of coverage of Rust Belt communities, their demise and struggles, there is a continuing need to document the region. Ken Light’s images in this book show the vestiges of the industrial past: abandoned factories, decaying infrastructure and disused machinery. The cities he visited struggle with high unemployment and massive population decline, testament to vanishing economic opportunities. Abandoned and angered by the political system, citizens feel left behind by a business class that offshored the production of goods and forsook them without a second thought. Report to the Shareholders weaves the proud heritage of blue-collar communities into this saga alongside striking historical ephemera that brings the black-and-white images of the present into high relief. The result is a poignant and persuasive visual journey through the Rust Belt, asking the question: how did we let this happen?

Détails du produit

Auteurs Ken Light
Edition Steidl
 
Langues Anglais
Format d'édition Livre Relié
Sortie 30.10.2025
 
EAN 9783969993385
ISBN 978-3-96999-338-5
Pages 168
Catégories Sciences humaines, art, musique > Art > Photographie, cinéma, vidéo, TV

Industrialisierung, USA, Amerika, entdecken, verlassene Fabriken, Rostgürtel, Industrieregion, schwindende Infrastruktur, stillgelegte Maschinen

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