Random House Value, 112 pp., $16.99
Dover, 224 pp., $9.95 (paper)
Knopf/A Constance Sullivan Book, 144 pp., $40.00
Aperture, 220 pp., $34.95; $25.00 (paper)
Aperture, 96 pp., $19.95 (paper)
Dover, 128 pp., $10.95 (paper)
Aperture, 240 pp., $29.95; $17.50 (paper)
Little, Brown, 662 pp., $29.95
Abrams/Museum of Modern Art, 112 pp., $35.00; $19.95 (paper)
Abrams, 192 pp., $45.00
Aperture, 80 pp., $25.00; $19.95 (paper)
Dover, 128 pp., $9.95 (paper)
Dover, 63 pp., $6.95
Aperture, 171 pp., $100.00
Aperture, 95 pp., $22.95; $14.95 (paper)
Abrams, 368 pp., $65.00
Abrams/Philadelphia Museum of Art, 160 pp., $45.00
Smithsonian, 176 pp., $29.95 (paper)
New York Public Library, 96 pp., $14.95
Abrams/Museum of Modern Art, 208 pp., $40.00; $29.95 (paper)
Abrams, 368 pp., $65.00
J. Paul Getty Museum, 410 pp., $95.00
Museum of Modern Art, 343 pp., $60.00; $29.95 (paper)
Dover, 557 pp., $13.95
Museum of Modern Art, 320 pp., $29.95 (paper)
Americans did not invent photography, and perhaps this has always rankled just a bit. After all, the list of American discoveries during the nineteenth century seems to include nearly everything: the carpet sweeper and the machine gun, the sleeping car and the harvester-thresher, the electric iron and the incandescent light, the phonograph and the safety razor, linotype and vulcanized rubber, and on and on. For another thing, the United States, just twenty-four years old at the century's start, was busy inventing itself, and photography—discovered in France by Nicéphore Niépce and developed there by Louis Daguerre and independently in England by William Henry Fox Talbot—would prove to be an essential tool in that process of self-creation. But just as the national identity could compose itself from the synthesis of many nationalities, and just as the American language—based on English, itself a synthesis—would become an omnivorous and ever-expanding construct that could take in borrowings from virtually every language, so the art and science of photography was effortlessly adopted by the fledgling nation, which could almost persuade itself of its ownership.
Review, 5562 words
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