Results 1 to 10 of about 16,221 (220)
Photojournalism-Based Intervention Reduces Caregiver Burden and Depression in Alzheimer’s Disease Family Caregivers [PDF]
Fayron R Epps, Lindsey Bridwell
exaly +2 more sources
Les Voyages en Roumanie de Gilles Saussier
Gilles Saussier has moved away from photojournalism to develop new documentary strategies which find their place in books or exhibition spaces. Among his works, Le Tableau de chasse (2010) and Spolia (2018) are presented as travel books to Romania.
Danièle Méaux
doaj +1 more source
The Role of Variables witnessed by the Hashemite Kingdome of Jordan in develop the Photojournalism in Jordanian daily newspapers between 1996 – 2019 [PDF]
This study aimed to identify the main variables which witnessed by the Hashemite Kingdome of Jordan between 1996- 2019, and it's role in develop the form and content of journalistic photograph in Jordanian daily newspapers, The problem of this study lies
Yahia Bani Amer +2 more
doaj +1 more source
“The Unseen Gulf War,” Disremembered Images and Method
In an evolution from the methodology now widely accepted by historians of photojournalism—namely to focus on the photograph as printed on the magazine page, and on its dissemination—I call for the need to pay attention instead to the large swathes of ...
Erica Payet
doaj +1 more source
The story of photojournalism is inextricably linked with humankind’s desire to understand the meaning of life itself. Photojournalism means visual reporting. At first read, that definition seems clear. When coined in the mid-20th century, photojournalism referred primarily to news photography: still photographs of significant or interesting events and ...
David Staton, Julianne H. Newton
+4 more sources
Facilitated by technological advances in cameras, printing methods and equipment, photojournalism blossomed throughout the world during the interwar period. It offered readers insights into the contemporary world, providing access to diverse peoples and
Shiho Maeshima
doaj +1 more source
Walking with The Murderers Are Among Us: Henry Ries’s Post-WWII Berlin Rubble Photographs
Henry Ries (1917–2004), a celebrated American-German photojournalist, was born into an upper-class Jewish family in Berlin. He immigrated to the U.S. in 1938 to escape Nazi Germany. As a new American citizen, he joined the U.S. Air Force.
Vivien Green Fryd
doaj +1 more source
Peripheral news workers expelled to the periphery: the case of camera reporters [PDF]
The professionals behind television cameras are peripheral contributors to journalism who are often overlooked in journalistic research in contrast with co-workers who occupy clearly demarcated journalistic roles.
Metykova, Monika +1 more
core +1 more source
An Action Research Intervention Towards Overcoming “Theory Resistance” in Photojournalism Students [PDF]
Account of an action research project designed to understand and overcome 'theory resistance' in undergraduate photojournalism students, based on the Academic Literacies model.
Good, Jennifer
core +1 more source
La fotografía de la Revolución mexicana: ¿el nacimiento de un fotoperiodismo mexicano?
For the centennial of the Mexican Revolution, several works were published on the photographs of the early 20th-century conflict. These works provide new interpretations of well-known pictures but also reveal actors and photographs until then unknown or ...
Marion Gautreau
doaj +1 more source

