Carol Quirke is a professor of American Studies at the State University of New York, Old Westbury, USA. She teaches women’s history, U.S. history, and visual culture. Her previous book Eyes on Labor: News Photography and America’s Working Class (2012) examines the political stakes of news photography for organized labor in America’s midcentury. Her essays appear in American Quarterly, Radical History Review, History Today, and Reviews in American History.
`Through the searing empathy of Dorothea Lange, Carol Quirke offers the best introduction to both the making of documentary photography as art and labor and the social justice impulses behind Lange's recording of the Great Depression and Japanese internment. Biography meets history in this wonderful history of a woman in her times who shaped how we look at the past.' Eileen Boris, Hull Professor of Feminist Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA `In this highly original portrait of Dorothea Lange, Carol Quirke places her not only in the context of the history of photography but also within the social and political history of the United States. Rather than an isolated artist, Lange emerges as a part of large social, political, and cultural movements. This book is as much a portrait of a changing nation as it is of an extraordinary documentarian. Joshua B. Freeman, Distinguished Professor of History, Queens College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA `Carol Quirke offers a well-researched, accessible narrative that explores Dorothea Lange's photography in the context of her life and times. It is at once a rich scholarly treatment and a compulsively readable story about one of the most important artists of the twentieth century. A must-have for students of photography history.' Cara A. Finnegan, Professor of Communication, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA `This book is a tender tribute to Dorothea Lange, her life, and her work evocative of American perseverance through hard times. By providing intimate details about Lange as an adventurer, an artist, and an activist, Carol Quirke allows us to get a better glimpse of what this remarkable woman truly saw through the camera lens.' Felicia A. Viator, Assistant Professor, History Department, San Francisco State University, USA `Long before the Great Recession of 2008, Black Lives Matter, and #MeToo, documentary photographer Dorothea Lange's life and work probed the class, race, and gender fissures that defined the United States in the mid-twentieth century. Carol Quirke's biography, with its sharp analysis, probing eye, and clear prose, captures why Lange remains meaningful in the twenty-first century.' Fred Carroll, Lecturer of History, Kennesaw State University, USA `Few Americans have lived more fascinating or consequential lives than Dorothea Lange. Her stunning photographs, together with her personal life story, illuminate some of the most significant moments of the twentieth century. In this excellent, accessible study, Carol Quirke brings Lange to life, showing us how this pathbreaking photographer helped to shape the tumultuous era that she so movingly chronicled.' Scott Laderman, Associate Professor of History, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA `Complex, compassionate, and clear-eyed, Dorothea Lange's legacy lives in her famous portraits as well as in her passionate commitment to ordinary people's lives and struggles. In Dorothea Lange, Documentary Photography, and Twentieth-Century America, historian Carol Quirke provides a unique and compelling story of Lange's life and labors. Quirke successfully shows that Lange, who saw her camera as a tool of research and an agent of change in the U. S. and internationally, was an early and powerful advocate for the social significance of documentary photography. Lange's empathic representations, justly celebrated worldwide, have not only endured but are even more valuable, as art and as activism, today.' Marcia M. Gallo, Associate Professor of History, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA