What Matters: Documentary Photography and Social Change

Photo essays have proven their ability not only to document but actually change the course of human events. If that is the case, shouldn't we be searching for the essential photo-essays of our time, the pictures that will spark public discourse and instigate the type of real-world reforms that engaged citizens in the past? What Matters, a new book edited by David Elliot Cohen, attempts to answer this question with eighteen important photo-essays by this generation's preeminent photojournalists. These essays poignantly address the big issues of our time: climate change, oil addiction, the inequitable distribution of global wealth and other current problems. The book ends with “What You Can Do,” an appendix that offers hundreds of ways to be part of the solution to the compelling challenges we now face.

Guests: David Elliot Cohen, Author and Editor; Michael Watts, Chancellor's Professor of Geography and Development Studies and Director of the Center for African Studies at the University of California, Berkeley; Ed Kashi, Photographer.

 
Date and Time:
 Thursday, July 9, 2009.  7:30 PM.
Approximate duration of 1.5 hour(s).
Location:
Annenberg Auditorium  [Map]
URL:
Audience:
General Public
Category:
Lectures/Readings
Sponsor:
The Aurora Forum is Cosponsored by Stanford's Office of Public Affairs and Stanford Continuing Studies
Contact:
Admission:
Free and Open to All
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Last Modified:
July 6, 2009