Jacob Holdt - American Pictures

cagoule

Padawan Learner
This is an interesting book however I'd advise sensitive people not to look at it as some of the pictures may be distressing.

In the 1970's Jacob Holdt traveled to America arriving with only $40 in his pocket. He traveled across America for over five years, criss-crossing the country by hitchhiking more than 100,000 miles and recording his impressions on film. He stayed in more than 400 homes - from the poorest migrant workers to America's wealthiest families (for instance, the Rockefellers) - recording these encounters on over 15,000 photographs taken with a cheap pocket camera. He would live with people who were so hungry they ate cat food and dirt, often in rat-infested shacks. His work captures the daily struggle of the American underclass and contrasts it with images of the life of America's elite.

Here is the author's introduction on his website.

International bestseller
The book based on the multi-media show is an international bestseller.

Read an online copy of the book here

In Scandinavia it sold the equivalent of 3 million copies in America. In Germany it was the longest running foreign book on the bestseller list ever.

In its personal and gripping tone many teachers in anthropology, sociology and political science find it an important tool "to help bring human life to the teaching" of their students.


High lights from the book
In this illustrated odyssey of 800 photos, the bulk in color, Jacob Holdt describes his experiences at the Wounded Knee uprising, with drug addicts in "shooting galleries", and in projects with welfare mothers.

He also depicts the friendships he developed with transvestites and transsexuals; the violence and murders he witnessed; his own arrest by the FBI; and his startling encounters with the opposite extreme of American society, including Jay Rockefeller and Ted Kennedy.

A modern Jacob Riis
The book is a forceful reminder that the poverty and inhuman living conditions which were so brilliantly exposed a hundred years before by Holdt's fellow Dane, Jacob A. Riis, in his classic study, "How the Other Half Lives," continue to exist.

The book is self-published by American Pictures Foundation in order to enable the homeless or the actual people portrayed in the book to sell it.

The book is now sold out since Jacob Holdt lost too much money selling it this way. He needs about $45.000 to reprint it. But you can read his online version here:

Online Virtual Book

This page in Danish
 
cagoule said:
In Scandinavia it sold the equivalent of 3 million copies in America.

Hi, I'm just curious what this means? Wouldn't 3 million copies be 3 million copies in both Scandinavia and America?
 
anart said:
cagoule said:
In Scandinavia it sold the equivalent of 3 million copies in America.

Hi, I'm just curious what this means? Wouldn't 3 million copies be 3 million copies in both Scandinavia and America?

The way I understand it is : In America they sold 3 millions copies for a population of 300 millions (approx) which corresponds to a ratio of 1% . So if the population of Scandinavia is 25 millions, they will have sold 0,25 millions (250 000).
 
Gandalf said:
anart said:
cagoule said:
In Scandinavia it sold the equivalent of 3 million copies in America.

Hi, I'm just curious what this means? Wouldn't 3 million copies be 3 million copies in both Scandinavia and America?

The way I understand it is : In America they sold 3 millions copies for a population of 300 millions (approx) which corresponds to a ratio of 1% . So if the population of Scandinavia is 25 millions, they will have sold 0,25 millions (250 000).

Ahhhh - I get it.
 
Ah, I didn't quite understand that bit either... :-[

Some of the stories and pictures are quite interesting though :cool:.
 
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