Photojournalists committed to making poverty visible, via AmericanPoverty.org. Commentary on this effort from the New Yorker’s Photo Booth blog.

Photojournalists committed to making poverty visible, via AmericanPoverty.org. Commentary on this effort from the New Yorker’s Photo Booth blog.

BAGnewsSalon, Oct. 16: Analyzing Media’s Visual Framing of the “Great Recession.” Join us for a real-time, online discussion starting at 1 pm EST. Nate Stormer of UMaine (go Black Bears!) moderates, and there’s an amazing lineup of photographers, including Anthony Suau and Michael Williamson. I’ll be there (late, sadly), commenting on the history of visual representations of poverty. Join us, and send your students and friends!

BAGnewsSalon, Oct. 16: Analyzing Media’s Visual Framing of the “Great Recession.” Join us for a real-time, online discussion starting at 1 pm EST. Nate Stormer of UMaine (go Black Bears!) moderates, and there’s an amazing lineup of photographers, including Anthony Suau and Michael Williamson. I’ll be there (late, sadly), commenting on the history of visual representations of poverty. Join us, and send your students and friends!

Photojournalists committed to making poverty visible, via AmericanPoverty.org. Commentary on this effort from the New Yorker’s Photo Booth blog.

Photojournalists committed to making poverty visible, via AmericanPoverty.org. Commentary on this effort from the New Yorker’s Photo Booth blog.

BAGnewsSalon, Oct. 16: Analyzing Media’s Visual Framing of the “Great Recession.” Join us for a real-time, online discussion starting at 1 pm EST. Nate Stormer of UMaine (go Black Bears!) moderates, and there’s an amazing lineup of photographers, including Anthony Suau and Michael Williamson. I’ll be there (late, sadly), commenting on the history of visual representations of poverty. Join us, and send your students and friends!

BAGnewsSalon, Oct. 16: Analyzing Media’s Visual Framing of the “Great Recession.” Join us for a real-time, online discussion starting at 1 pm EST. Nate Stormer of UMaine (go Black Bears!) moderates, and there’s an amazing lineup of photographers, including Anthony Suau and Michael Williamson. I’ll be there (late, sadly), commenting on the history of visual representations of poverty. Join us, and send your students and friends!

About:

Visual Politics: All things visual in public life. Presented by Cara Finnegan, scholar, teacher, rhetoric geek. Lover of photography, art, print culture, politics, and troublemakers.

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