Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Ellis Island Experience: Through the Eyes of Lewis Hine
View through CrossRef
In a historical approach, this article examines the way immigration was captured by means of a medium that was just as new and astonishing as the social upheavals brought about by modernity of which immigration itself was a key factor: photography. To this purpose, photographs taken on Ellis Island by Lewis W. Hine, one of the major photographers of his time, are described, analyzed, and interpreted. After a short introduction to the photographer’s method and approach to the subject, an in-depth analysis of four examples from his Ellis Island series shall help to elucidate in how far his visualizations of the migration process convey a remarkably wide array of factual and emotional aspects linked to this chapter of US history. Not only do the photographs give a vivid impression of the daily proceedings immigrants and officials were involved in, they also shed light on the immigrants as not merely masses of foreigners but as human beings. It is Hine’s aim of countering prevalently negative opinions and images as well as the focus on the individual immigrant experience that makes his work social photography and thus situates his photographs on the threshold between social documentation and art.
Title: The Ellis Island Experience: Through the Eyes of Lewis Hine
Description:
In a historical approach, this article examines the way immigration was captured by means of a medium that was just as new and astonishing as the social upheavals brought about by modernity of which immigration itself was a key factor: photography.
To this purpose, photographs taken on Ellis Island by Lewis W.
Hine, one of the major photographers of his time, are described, analyzed, and interpreted.
After a short introduction to the photographer’s method and approach to the subject, an in-depth analysis of four examples from his Ellis Island series shall help to elucidate in how far his visualizations of the migration process convey a remarkably wide array of factual and emotional aspects linked to this chapter of US history.
Not only do the photographs give a vivid impression of the daily proceedings immigrants and officials were involved in, they also shed light on the immigrants as not merely masses of foreigners but as human beings.
It is Hine’s aim of countering prevalently negative opinions and images as well as the focus on the individual immigrant experience that makes his work social photography and thus situates his photographs on the threshold between social documentation and art.
Related Results
ELLIS ISLAND AS A MEMORY PLACE ACCORDING TO LEWİS HINE, GEORGES PEREC AND JR
ELLIS ISLAND AS A MEMORY PLACE ACCORDING TO LEWİS HINE, GEORGES PEREC AND JR
Ellis Island in New York, USA, served as a center accepting the entry of people who immigrated to the United States between 1892 and 1954. Afterwards, it lost its function due to t...
On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
On Flores Island, do "ape-men" still exist? https://www.sapiens.org/biology/flores-island-ape-men/
<span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="background:#f9f9f4"><span style="line-height:normal"><span style="font-family:Calibri,sans-serif"><b><spa...
Portraying Race beyond Ellis Island: The Case of Lewis Hine
Portraying Race beyond Ellis Island: The Case of Lewis Hine
Lewis Hine first went to New York’s Ellis Island Immigration Station to take photographs that would elicit sympathy from his students at the Ethical Culture School toward the new i...
Features of the Choroidal Structure in Children With Anisometropic Amblyopia
Features of the Choroidal Structure in Children With Anisometropic Amblyopia
Purpose:
To examine the choroidal structure in children with anisometropic amblyopia using the binarization method.
Methods:
...
Changes in axial length in anisometropic children wearing orthokeratology lenses
Changes in axial length in anisometropic children wearing orthokeratology lenses
PurposeThere is a particular anisometropia occurring in one eye with myopia, while the other eye has very low myopia, emmetropia, or very low hyperopia. It is unclear how the binoc...
From Bath to Cambridge: The Early Life and Education of Robert Leslie Ellis
From Bath to Cambridge: The Early Life and Education of Robert Leslie Ellis
AbstractRobert Leslie Ellis was born in Bath on 25 August 1817. His father, Francis Ellis (1772–1842), had held a position in the Admiralty, but resigned when he became the princip...
Assessment of pupillary light reflex using dynamic pupillometry in laser-treated eyes with retinal vein occlusion
Assessment of pupillary light reflex using dynamic pupillometry in laser-treated eyes with retinal vein occlusion
Purpose: This study aims to evaluate the pupillary light reflex measured with dynamic pupillometry in patients who underwent retinal laser photocoagulation due to unilateral retina...

