
Picturing Algeria
Lee Lawrence
Pierre Bourdieu, author; Franz Schultheis and Christine Frisinghelli, eds.
2012, Columbia UP, $75 hb, $30 pb
Anyone interested in one of the most influential social scientists of our day, Algeria, colonialism or documentary photography will benefit from Picturing Algeria, first published in French in 2003. The book revolves around some 150 photographs that Bourdieu took in Algeria in the late 1950s. Thematic sections deal with the effects of war and societal crises, Bourdieu's notions of "Habitus and Habitat," gender and poverty. In each, excerpts from Bourdieu's writings speak to rather than about the accompanying photographs. These sections are bookended by a 2001 interview with Bourdieu, a sequence of imagery and an essay by Frisinghelli. The effect is a cumulative exploration of Bourdieu's approach to research, his insights into the outcomes of dislocation and disruption, and his views on the role he plays as the man behind the camera.
You may also be interested in...
Archeologist Breathes New Life Into Recently Abandoned 5,000-Year-Old City
Archeologist Rubina Raja pieces together Palmyra’s life story, from its Bronze Age beginnings to its place as a trading hub for the Roman Empire.Book Dispels Myths Behind Power Relations Shaping Medieval Levant
Historian James Wilson offers assesses the political situation in Syria (Bilad al-Sham) in the decades leading up to the First Crusade.Revaluating 16th-century Ottoman Conquest of Tunisia
Although Ottomans invaded Northern Africa in 1534, the true conquest came in the following decades as settlers arrived from across the Ottoman Empire.