Alfred 
        Kazin, a cultural critic of the 30s and 40s, wrote about the documentary 
        genre that "if the accumulation of visual scenes seemed only a collection 
        of 'mutually repellant particles,' as Emerson said of his sentences, was 
        not that discontinuity, that havoc of pictorial sensations, just 
        the truth of what the documentary mind saw before it in the 1930s?" (Stott 
        77).  
      In the case 
        of the FSA photography, can this have been true? As the public relations 
        project of a federal program, the FSA certainly had an interest in producing 
        a body of images that reflected a coherent ideology. Reading an ideological 
        agenda out of the FSA photographs can be a productive but methodologically 
        challenging task. 
      	Kazin's 
        On Native Grounds took on the subject of literature as well as 
        photography in its exploration of the culture of the 1930s. In that spirit, 
        I've considered a passage from Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children 
        on the nature of historical perspective in thinking about how to read 
        the work of the FSA.  
       
         
          Reality 
            is a question of perspective; the further you get from the past, the 
            more concrete and plausible it seems- but as you approach the present, 
            it inevitably seems more and more incredible. Suppose yourself in 
            a large cinema, sitting at first in the back row, and gradually moving 
            up, row by row, until your nose is almost pressed against the screen. 
            Gradually the stars' faces dissolve into dancing grain; tiny details 
            assume grostesque proportions; the illusion dissolves- or rather, 
            it becomes clear that the illusion itself is reality... (189). 
        
      
      Rushdie is 
        talking, here, about the question of objectivity about the recent past. 
        I think his movie screen metaphor works well both for more general issues 
        of historical perspective and, also, for the body of FSA photography. 
        Up close, many of the photos can seem like Emerson's "mutually repellant 
        particles," like a "havoc of pictorial sensations." They hold within them 
        worlds of historical meaning that exist quite independently of the overarching 
        themes we may see come into focus when we step back to consider the photographs 
        more as a body of work.  
      I've tried 
        to cultivate the type of critical perspective that moves constantly between 
        the first and last rows of the cinema house, so that neither interpretive 
        framework, that which favors creative chaos and that which sees metanarrative, 
        is lost to my vision. 
       
         
       
      
         
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        Juliet Gorman, May 2001  
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