BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ARTICLE
Hill & Wang, 120 pp., $10.95
Simon & Schuster, 570 pp., $9.95 (paper)
The Museum of Modern Art, distributed by the New York Graphic Society, 151, 82 plates pp., $12.50 (paper)
The Museum of Modern Art, distributed by the New York Graphic Society, 180, 121 plates, 83 illus pp., $40.00
Viking, unpaged pp., $35.00
University of California Press, 122, 85 black and white photographs pp., $19.95 (paper)
Dover, 80 pp., $5.00 (paper)
Peregrine Smith, 53 pp., $19.95
Viking, 180 pp., $75.00
Pantheon, 160 pp., $12.95 (paper)
Viking, 144 pp., $45.00
Thames and Hudson, distributed by Norton, 112 pp., $27.50
Knopf, unpaged pp., $12.95 (paper)
Pantheon, 103 pp., $11.95 (paper)
Pantheon, 112 pp., $14.95 (paper)
Little, Brown, 200 pp., $17.50
Aperture, 191 pp., $50.00
Knopf, 156 pp., $12.95 (paper)
Rizzoli, 175 pp., $32.50
Pantheon, 144 pp., $30.00
Friends of Photography, 56 pp., $30.00
Roto Vision, distributed by Norton, unpaged pp., $30.00
New York Graphic Society, 128 pp., $37.50
Morrow, 156 pp., $15.95 until December 31, 1981, then $19.95
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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