Ultimate Insiders: White House Photographers and How They Shape History
Autor Kenneth T. Walshen Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 oct 2017
This book shows how official White House photographers have morphed into ultimate insiders within the American presidency, allowed to observe and take pictures of nearly everything Chief Executives do related to their job. The "photogs" have often become close friends with the presidents they have served. Using these bonds of trust and their own powers of observation, they created fundamental impressions and public images of the presidents through the art of photography. Acting not only as image makers but as visual historians, they have built pictorial chronicles of the presidency—intimate narratives of America’s leaders in public and private, showing how they dealt with everyday life as well as moments of great crisis and opportunity. From children playing in the Oval Office to decisions to send troops into harm’s way, images created by White House photographers can make or break a presidential administration as well as define an era.
Preț: 188.72 lei
Preț vechi: 225.37 lei
-16% Nou
Puncte Express: 283
Preț estimativ în valută:
36.12€ • 37.57$ • 30.27£
36.12€ • 37.57$ • 30.27£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 13-27 martie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781138737600
ISBN-10: 1138737607
Pagini: 302
Ilustrații: 35 Halftones, black and white; 35 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1138737607
Pagini: 302
Ilustrații: 35 Halftones, black and white; 35 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.65 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
General, Professional Practice & Development, and UndergraduateCuprins
Introduction Insider Views and Insider Insights
Chapter One How Lincoln and FDR Set the Pace, and How Their Successors Wrote Their Own Rules
Chapter Two Behind the Scenes with John F. Kennedy, Cecil Stoughton, and the Glamor Lensmen
Chapter Three Behind the Scenes with Lyndon B. Johnson and Yoichi Okamoto
Chapter Four Behind the Scenes with Richard Nixon and Ollie Atkins
Chapter Five Behind the Scenes with Gerald Ford and David Kennerly
Chapter Six Behind the Scenes with Jimmy Carter and a Missing Chief Photographer
Chapter Seven Behind the Scenes with Ronald Reagan, Michael Evans, and Pete Souza
Chapter Eight Behind the Scenes with George H.W. Bush and David Valdez
Chapter Nine Behind the Scenes with Bill Clinton, Bob McNeely, and Sharon Farmer
Chapter Ten Behind the Scenes with George W. Bush and Eric Draper
Chapter Eleven Behind the Scenes with Barack Obama and Pete Souza
Chapter Twelve Behind the Scenes with Donald Trump and His Commanding Style of Image Making
Chapter Thirteen The Vital Role of the "Photodogs"
Chapter Fourteen Master Photojournalists Who Made Their Mark on History
Chapter Fifteen The Ultimate Insiders’ Evolving Tools of the Trade
Epilogue The Future of White House Photography
Selected Readings
Chapter One How Lincoln and FDR Set the Pace, and How Their Successors Wrote Their Own Rules
Chapter Two Behind the Scenes with John F. Kennedy, Cecil Stoughton, and the Glamor Lensmen
Chapter Three Behind the Scenes with Lyndon B. Johnson and Yoichi Okamoto
Chapter Four Behind the Scenes with Richard Nixon and Ollie Atkins
Chapter Five Behind the Scenes with Gerald Ford and David Kennerly
Chapter Six Behind the Scenes with Jimmy Carter and a Missing Chief Photographer
Chapter Seven Behind the Scenes with Ronald Reagan, Michael Evans, and Pete Souza
Chapter Eight Behind the Scenes with George H.W. Bush and David Valdez
Chapter Nine Behind the Scenes with Bill Clinton, Bob McNeely, and Sharon Farmer
Chapter Ten Behind the Scenes with George W. Bush and Eric Draper
Chapter Eleven Behind the Scenes with Barack Obama and Pete Souza
Chapter Twelve Behind the Scenes with Donald Trump and His Commanding Style of Image Making
Chapter Thirteen The Vital Role of the "Photodogs"
Chapter Fourteen Master Photojournalists Who Made Their Mark on History
Chapter Fifteen The Ultimate Insiders’ Evolving Tools of the Trade
Epilogue The Future of White House Photography
Selected Readings
Recenzii
Praise for Ultimate Insiders
The president’s "bully pulpit" at the White House is commanded as much by the visual as the verbal. This new book significantly captures this truth in a wonderful collection of images that have shaped our nation’s history, along with the personal stories of the artists who "did the snaps." A must for every student of White House history.
Mike McCurry, White House Press Secretary to President Bill Clinton
Kenneth Walsh has become one of America's great chroniclers of all things presidential. Ultimate Insiders is a marvelous look at the role White House photographers play in setting the tone and tenor of our times. Highly recommended!
Douglas Brinkley, Rice University
Remember the picture of Kennedy sheepishly walking away from Marilyn Monroe. Or of Reagan meeting Gorbachev. Or iconic shots of Obama’s anguish in defeat and Trump’s frustration with the swamp. The only people in the world close enough to touch the people in these photos are the Presidential Photographers, but we only see the back of their heads. In this book the consummate historian of the modern presidency, Ken Walsh, has given them all faces. Walsh’s book describes and tells the stories of the characters, charmers, egos, and true believers who photograph the lives of our Presidents. It’s a great read.
Marlin Fitzwater, White House Press Secretary to Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush
Ken Walsh, veteran White House reporter, gives us a fascinating and well-written account of the presidential photographers who have chronicled our presidents. The book looks at the untold story of who these people have been and, in doing so, explicates the power and politics of images that have shaped every presidency in the modern era.
Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University
More often than not, a single photograph can tell a story with more detail than a news article ever could. Kenneth Walsh expertly conveys this message, taking readers behind the curtain of the White House and into the most intimate moments of a president’s time in office. He shows readers the important role of White House photographers and how our history is lost without them.
Dana Perino, White House Press Secretary to President George W. Bush
Kenneth Walsh captures the extraordinary "snapshots" that provide context and texture to a full view of our Presidents. Well done!
Kenneth M. Duberstein, White House Chief of Staff to President Ronald Reagan
In Ultimate Insiders, Ken Walsh tells the story of one of the most exclusive clubs in photojournalism: personal photographers to the President of the United States. Behind-the-scenes stories and intimate portraits of the brilliant men and women in this club are preserved forever here…. Ken Walsh’s book is an affecting portrait of this work and the special people who have practiced it.
Neil Leifer, Time, Inc.; Photographer and documentary filmmaker
The president’s "bully pulpit" at the White House is commanded as much by the visual as the verbal. This new book significantly captures this truth in a wonderful collection of images that have shaped our nation’s history, along with the personal stories of the artists who "did the snaps." A must for every student of White House history.
Mike McCurry, White House Press Secretary to President Bill Clinton
Kenneth Walsh has become one of America's great chroniclers of all things presidential. Ultimate Insiders is a marvelous look at the role White House photographers play in setting the tone and tenor of our times. Highly recommended!
Douglas Brinkley, Rice University
Remember the picture of Kennedy sheepishly walking away from Marilyn Monroe. Or of Reagan meeting Gorbachev. Or iconic shots of Obama’s anguish in defeat and Trump’s frustration with the swamp. The only people in the world close enough to touch the people in these photos are the Presidential Photographers, but we only see the back of their heads. In this book the consummate historian of the modern presidency, Ken Walsh, has given them all faces. Walsh’s book describes and tells the stories of the characters, charmers, egos, and true believers who photograph the lives of our Presidents. It’s a great read.
Marlin Fitzwater, White House Press Secretary to Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush
Ken Walsh, veteran White House reporter, gives us a fascinating and well-written account of the presidential photographers who have chronicled our presidents. The book looks at the untold story of who these people have been and, in doing so, explicates the power and politics of images that have shaped every presidency in the modern era.
Julian E. Zelizer, Princeton University
More often than not, a single photograph can tell a story with more detail than a news article ever could. Kenneth Walsh expertly conveys this message, taking readers behind the curtain of the White House and into the most intimate moments of a president’s time in office. He shows readers the important role of White House photographers and how our history is lost without them.
Dana Perino, White House Press Secretary to President George W. Bush
Kenneth Walsh captures the extraordinary "snapshots" that provide context and texture to a full view of our Presidents. Well done!
Kenneth M. Duberstein, White House Chief of Staff to President Ronald Reagan
In Ultimate Insiders, Ken Walsh tells the story of one of the most exclusive clubs in photojournalism: personal photographers to the President of the United States. Behind-the-scenes stories and intimate portraits of the brilliant men and women in this club are preserved forever here…. Ken Walsh’s book is an affecting portrait of this work and the special people who have practiced it.
Neil Leifer, Time, Inc.; Photographer and documentary filmmaker
Descriere
Virtually unknown to the public or historians, White House photographers have developed amazing access to the Presidents of the United States over the past half-century—becoming "ultimate insiders" not only in capturing poignant and powerful images, but also in gaining deep insight into presidential lives. In this book, long-time White House Correspondent Kenneth T. Walsh tells their stories, emphasizing observations about the presidents the photographers got to know so well along with other key figures close to those presidents—including the First Ladies, members of Congress, and important world leaders.