Volume 28, Number 20 · December 17, 1981

That Old Black and White Magic

By Clive James

BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ARTICLE

Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography
by Roland Barthes, translated by Richard Howard

Hill & Wang, 120 pp., $10.95

Photography in Print: Writings from 1816 to the Present
edited by Vicki Goldberg

Simon & Schuster, 570 pp., $9.95 (paper)

Before Photography: Painting and the Invention of Photography
by Peter Galassi

The Museum of Modern Art, distributed by the New York Graphic Society, 151, 82 plates pp., $12.50 (paper)

The Work of Atget, Vol. 1: Old France
edited by John Szarkowski, edited by Maria Morris Hambourg

The Museum of Modern Art, distributed by the New York Graphic Society, 180, 121 plates, 83 illus pp., $40.00

The Autochromes of J.H. Lartigue, 1912-1927

Viking, unpaged pp., $35.00

The Photography of Max Yavno
text by Ben Maddow

University of California Press, 122, 85 black and white photographs pp., $19.95 (paper)

Feininger's Chicago, 1941

Dover, 80 pp., $5.00 (paper)

Cole Weston: Eighteen Photographs
foreword by Ben Maddow, introduction by Charis Wilson

Peregrine Smith, 53 pp., $19.95

American Photographers and the National Parks
by Robert Cahn, by Robert Glenn Ketchum

Viking, 180 pp., $75.00

New England Reflections, 1882-1907
photographs by the Howes Brothers, edited by Alan B. Newman, foreword by Richard Wilbur, introduction by Gerald McFarland

Pantheon, 160 pp., $12.95 (paper)

Man as Art: New Guinea
photographs by Malcolm Kirk, text by Andrew Strathern

Viking, 144 pp., $45.00

Rajasthan: India's Enchanted Land,
introduction and photographs by Raghubir Singh, foreword by Satyajit Ray

Thames and Hudson, distributed by Norton, 112 pp., $27.50

Falkland Road: Prostitutes of Bombay
by Mary Ellen Mark

Knopf, unpaged pp., $12.95 (paper)

Nicaragua: June 1978-July 1979
by Susan Meiselas

Pantheon, 103 pp., $11.95 (paper)

Visions of China: Photographs by Marc Riboud, 1957-1980
introduction by Orville Schell

Pantheon, 112 pp., $14.95 (paper)

The Russians
by Vladimir Sichov

Little, Brown, 200 pp., $17.50

William Klein: Photographs
profile by John Heilpern

Aperture, 191 pp., $50.00

Don McCullin: Hearts of Darkness
introduction by John Le Carré

Knopf, 156 pp., $12.95 (paper)

Herbert List: Photographs 1930-1970
by Günter Metken, introduction by Stephen Spender

Rizzoli, 175 pp., $32.50

Robert Rauschenberg Photographs

Pantheon, 144 pp., $30.00

John Pfahl: Altered Landscapes

Friends of Photography, 56 pp., $30.00

Sam Haskins/Photographics

Roto Vision, distributed by Norton, unpaged pp., $30.00

Bill Brandt: Nudes 1945-1980
introduction by Michael Hiley

New York Graphic Society, 128 pp., $37.50

Hollywood Color Photographs
by John Kobal

Morrow, 156 pp., $15.95 until December 31, 1981, then $19.95

A Century of Japanese Photography
by the Japan Photographers Association, introduction by John W. Dower

Pantheon, 400 pp., $47.50

The flow of photographic images from the past suggests that what we are already experiencing as a deepening flood in the present will seem, in the near future, like a terminal inundation. Most of the theoretical works purporting to find some sort of pattern in the cataract of pictures only increase the likelihood that we will lose our grip. But occasionally a book makes sense of the uproar. Appearing in the author's native language just before his death, Roland Barthes's Camera Lucida, now published posthumously in English, will make the reader sorrier than ever that this effervescent critic is no longer among the living. Barthes was the inspiration of many a giftless tract by his disciples but he himself was debarred by genuine critical talent from finding any lasting value in mechanized schemes. By the end of his life he seemed very keen to reestablish the personal, the playful, and even the quirky at the center of his intellectual effort, perhaps because he had seen, among some of those who took his earlier work as an example, how easily method can become madness.



Review, 7411 words

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