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Hardback
Published: 31st August 2022
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Published: 1st September 2017
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Published: 20th January 2021
Hardback
Published: 18th June 2025
Hardback
Published: 1st June 2018
Paperback
Published: 10th February 2025
Susan Meiselas: Nicaragua: June 1978July 1979
By (Author) Susan Meiselas
Text by Kristen Lubben
Aperture
Aperture
18th June 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
128
Width 274mm, Height 215mm
Originally published in 1981, and now in a third edition, Susan Meiselas's Nicaragua is a contemporary classic-a seminal contribution to the literature of concerned photography.
Nicaragua: June 1978July 1979 forms an extraordinary narrative of a nation in turmoil. Starting with a powerful and chilling evocation of the Somoza regime during its decline in the late 1970s, the images trace the evolution of the popular resistance that led to the triumph of the Sandinista revolution in 1979. The book includes interviews with various participants in the revolution, along with letters, poems, and statistics.
In the decades following the original publication, Meiselas has continued to contextualize her photographs and relate them to history as it unfolded. Multiple editions build upon this body of work to evoke and conjure up the reality of people's lives and aspirations, their victories and disappointments. In this new edition, thirty images are linked via QR codes to excerpts from the films Pictures from a Revolution (1991, codirected with Richard P. Rogers and Alfred Guzzetti) in which Meiselas tracks down and interviews the people she photographed, and Reframing History (2004, codirected with Alfred Guzzetti), her collaboration with local communities in installing mural-sized images in the places where they were originally taken, eliciting the memories and reflections of those passing by. By extending and deepening her work, Meiselas asks us "to consider not only the specific timeframe of this book, but to think about the broader perspective of history unfolding, and how in the passage of time a photograph of a single moment in a person's life shifts its meanings as well as our perception of it." An interview with the artist by Magnum Foundation's director, Kristen Lubben, addresses how the work of this evolving project has been circulated, revisited, and repatriated-and how and why it endures.
Susan Meiselas (born in Baltimore, 1948) is a documentary photographer based in New York. She received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College and her MA in visual education from Harvard University. Her first book, Carnival Strippers, was published in 1976. That year, Meiselas joined Magnum Photos, where she remains a member, and since 2007 has served as president of the Magnum Foundation. Her numerous awards include a Guggenheim Fellowship, Deutsche Brse Photography Foundation Prize, and the first Women in Motion Award from Kering and Rencontres d'Arles. Kristen Lubben is a curator, writer, editor, and executive director of the Magnum Foundation.