Impounded: Dorothea Lange and the Censored Images of Japanese American Internment
Dorothea Lange, . . Norton, $29.95 (224pp) ISBN 978-0-393-06073-7
When America's War Relocation Authority hired Dorothea Lange to photograph the internment of Japanese-Americans in 1942, they put a few restrictions on her work. Barbed wire, watchtowers and armed soldiers were off limits, they declared. And no pictures of resistance, either. They wanted the roundup and sequestering of Japanese-Americans documented—but not too well. Working within these limits, Lange, who is best known for her photographs of migrant farmers during the Depression, nonetheless produced images whose content so opposed the federal objective of demonizing Japanese-Americans that the vast majority of the photographs were suppressed throughout WWII (97% of them have never been published at all). Editors Gordon and Okihiro set this first collection of Lange's internment work within technical, cultural and historical contexts. Gordon (
Reviewed on: 07/17/2006
Genre: Nonfiction
Paperback - 224 pages - 978-0-393-33090-8