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Wendy Ewald: American Alphabets

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In this artist’s book, Wendy Ewald (Secret Games), a conceptual photographer, investigates the ability of language to create barriers or alliances between groups according to gender, age, and race. In collaboration with children she created four a Spanish alphabet with English-as-a-Second-Language students in North Carolina, an African-American alphabet with students at an elementary school in Cleveland, a White-Girls alphabet at a boarding school in Massachusetts, and an Arabic alphabet with students at a middle school in Queens, New York. The book offers an astonishing, playful, and profound look at written language and its power from various cultural perspectives. Ewald raises provocative questions about contemporary society, its divisions and the social power of language, at once liberating and oppressive. The book combines language with photographic images allowing us to see ourselves in a fresh light!My first encounter with language was the alphabet printed in children’s alphabet books. In retrospect, I understand that the words and visual examples these books used to represent letters—a picture of a shiny new car, say, for the letter C—affirmed the world view of the white middle-class girl I happened to be. I grew up assuming that this conformity of written expression to one’s world held true for all children.These projects confirmed the vivid tensions between our formal"ruling" language and the valence of language for people who do not share many assumptions of the general culture. They underlined the way in which the alphabet, the literal font of our literacy, expands our understanding of the self.—Wendy Ewald

167 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2005

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About the author

Wendy Ewald

26 books7 followers
Wendy Ewald (born in 1951) is an American photographer and educator.

Wendy Ewald was born in Detroit, Michigan, graduated from Abbot Academy in 1969 and attended Antioch College between 1969–74, as well as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she studied photography with Minor White. She embarked on a career teaching photography to children and young people internationally. In 1969 & 1970, she taught photography to Innu and Mi'kmaq Native-American children in Canada. Between 1976–80 she taught photography and film-making to students in Whitesburg, Kentucky, in association with Appalshop, a media co-op. In 1982, she traveled to Ráquira, Colombia, on a Fulbright fellowship working with children and community groups; spending a further two years in Gujarat, India. Ewald is married to Tom McDonough, a writer and cinematographer. They live in the Hudson Valley of New York with their son, Michael.

(from Wikipedia)

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Barbara.
1,102 reviews6 followers
September 27, 2020
Visual depiction - photography - to create several alphabet primers. The alphabets depicted are Arabic, African American, Spanish, and White Girls.
Profile Image for Emily.
362 reviews23 followers
July 18, 2009
Very cool idea- using photography to allow American children from different backgrounds to make their own alphabet primers.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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