Blogpost #11-a
At the MFA, I learned a lot about the photojournalism process: how photos were selected from negatives, by whom, and for what reasons. It was fascinating to see famous photos in the gallery and uncover the stories behind them. I learned that most negative editors were actually women, and this definitely surprised me that females were given such an integral role in the photojournalism process at that time and played a large part in the printing of many well-known images. One such notable instance was Peggy Sargent, responsible for selecting the best negatives from Alfred Eisenstaedt’s photos covering World War II victory celebrations. The fact that she also suggested cropping it to be the way it is now also highlights the major role female negative editors held.
The postulation that this photo was possibly an instance of sexual harassment was even more shocking. And having that fact brought to my attention made me pay attention to details I hadn’t seen before. For instance, that the woman being kissed in this picture seems to be holding a fork pointed straight at the man’s jugular and that the man’s arms appear to be aggressively trapping her head. This part of the exhibit and others like Alexandra Bell’s critiques on implicit bias made me realize the power that images held and how they can be greatly misleading at times.
The exhibit that resonated with me the most was the exhibition photos of the Japanese internment camps during WWII because it struck me as ironic that a majority of the images published were ones depicting civilians that appeared happy and smiling despite being forcibly removed from their homes, locked away, and segregated from the rest of society. The subtle racial bias and even the use of the slur “Japs” in the Life Magazine article published along with these images was also very shocking. The quote “They have everything except liberty” especially saddened me. It was also interesting to observe how the Japanese civilians were able to adjust to their new situation and make the best of it.
In addition, Julia Wachtel’s work critiquing Life Magazine’s “sometimes euphemistic presentation of U.S. ethnic discrimination” was a novelty. Her juxtaposition of the mundane life of the Japanese women and a painting of General MacArthur and her decision to compose certain parts of it into dots were cool to read about.














