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The Family Of Man

Dec 24, 2015
by Caroline Miller
a picture is worth a 1000 words, Amos and Andy, Confessions of an Ephemeralist, Paul Ford, pictures versus words, The Family of Man, trawling the internet
2 Comments

When I was in college, I became aware of a popular publication called, The Family of Man.   Between its covers were photographs from around the world, depicting how people in different countries, cultures and ages lived.  No words accompanied the photographs and  none were necessary.  A picture, they say, is worth a thousand words, and each of those in The Family of Man could rightly be described as an essay, ones I “read” again and again until the pages fell lose and the covers tore. 

The difference between the written word and a photograph, writes Paul Ford, is that words have edges.  In book form, the story comes to an end on the final page.  But photographs have no boundaries.  “It’s up to the finder what to make of them.” (“Confessions of an Ephemeralist,” by Paul Ford, New Republic, December 2015, pg.5)  In the debate between those who read and those who prefer to spend their time on social media, Ford tends to side with the latter.  Trawling internet data bases “constitutes ‘reading’ for me.” (Ibid pg 4.)  Doing so, he writes,  allows him to participate in any culture’s past and present.  Even old advertisements tell a story.  Look at laundry day in the 1920s, the 1960s and the present. An entire history of lifestyles is on display.

By making himself a witness to change, Ford has learned in a visceral way that his own life is ephemeral.  That lesson, he insists,  isn’t as readily accessible through books as it is through pictures.

I love my books and if I had to chose, I’d side with readers.  But, I agree with Ford, the internet is a visual world with which I couldn’t do without. Its lessons are more graphic than any that can be grasped by reading an encyclopedia.  Pictures from the heartlands of America at the turn of the century show me that a man at 40 years is old.  Not true for a man of 40 years today.  Or compare women’s dresses from Victorian times to the 21st Century.  What we see is a cavalcade of change as women sought their liberation.  Radio ads tell us much about the past and present as well.   Would a program like Amos and Andy survive today? (Click)

Ford is right.  Trawling the internet offers a global perspective on the history of man, one more immediate to our understanding than a book. The judgments that follow, of course,  are our own.

The Family of Man

The Family of Man courtesy of yahoo.com

 

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2 Comments
  1. Brenda December 24, 2015 at 11:30 am Reply
    Books that don't tell you everything also have no boundaries.Present day example: "All the Light You Cannot See." Many people have said to me, "What really happened?" Perhaps creating all those mental pictures while reading doesn't do it for everyone.
    • Caroline Miller December 24, 2015 at 12:13 pm Reply
      Haven't read the book. Your comment makes me curious. Something for my reading list. I tend to like an open ending where, as a reader, my thoughts can swim.

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Contact Caroline at

carolinemiller11@yahoo.com

Portland, Oregon author Caroline Miller had distinguished careers as an educator, union president, elected official and artist/advocate.

Her play, Woman on the Scarlet Beast, was performed at the Post5 Theatre, Portland, OR, January/February 2015

Caroline published a serialized novelette, Marie Eau-Claire, on the website, The Colored Lens.  She also published the story Gustav Pavel,  a parable about ordinary lives, choice and alternate potential, on the website Fixional.co.

Caroline has published four novels

  • Ballet Noir
  • Trompe l’Oeil
  • Gothic Spring
  • Heart Land

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