Race Stories: Essays on the Power of Images: By Maurice Berger
By (Author) Maurice Berger
Edited by Marvin Heiferman
Foreword by Dr. Henry Louis Gates
Preface by Sarah Lewis
Preface by Leigh Raiford
Preface by Deborah Willis
Afterword by Dawoud Bey
Afterword by Nona Faustine
Afterword by Peter Kunhardt
Designed by Morcos Key
Aperture
Aperture
26th March 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
778.92608996073
Hardback
272
Width 167mm, Height 241mm, Spine 25mm
453g
The first title in Apertures Vision & Justice seriesfeaturing a collection of award-winning short essays by Maurice Berger that explore the intersections of photography, race, and visual culture.
Race Stories: Essays on the Power of Images examines the transformational role photography plays in shaping ideas and attitudes about race and how photographic images have been instrumental in both perpetuating and combatting racial stereotypes. Written between 2012 and 2019 and first presented as a monthly feature on the New York Timess Lens blog, Bergers incisive essays help readers see a bigger picture about race through story-telling. By directing attention to the most revealing aspects of images, Berger makes complex issues comprehensible, vivid, and engaging. The essays illuminate a range of images, issues, and events: the modern civil rights movement; African American, Latinx, Asian American, and Native American photography; and pivotal moments in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries when race, photography, and visual culture intersected. They also examine the full spectrum of photographic imaging: from amateur to professional pictures, from snapshots to fine art, from mugshots to celebrated icons of photojournalism.
Race Stories collects together Bergers reader-friendly essays in their breadth and brilliance to encourage a broad range of readers to look at and think about photographs in order to better understand themselves and the diverse world around them.
Maurice Berger (born and died in New York, 1956-2020) was a cultural historian, curator, and writer, who spent much of his career studying and teaching racial literacy through innovative visual literacy projects. In influential essays, books, and provocative museum exhibitions, Berger gathered and presented compelling photographic images to engage and challenge readers and viewers into reconsidering both cultural and personal assumptions and prejudices. His books include White Lies: Race and the Myths of Whiteness (2000) and For All the World to See: Visual Culture and the Struggle for Civil Rights (2010), which was also was one of the premier projects mounted by the National Museum of African American History and Culture. He received honors and grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, National Endowment for the Arts, Association of Art Museum Curators, and Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and was nominated for an Emmy Award.