This Far and No Further
Photographs Inspired by the Voting Rights Movement
William Abranowicz author Zander Abranowicz author Nikole Hannah-Jones editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Published:9th Feb '21
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Standing on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, in 2017, photographer William Abranowicz was struck by the weight of historical memory at this hallowed site of one of the civil rights movement's defining episodes: 1965's “Bloody Sunday,” when Alabama police officers attacked peaceful marchers. To Abranowicz’s eye, Selma seemed relatively unchanged from its apperance in the photographs Walker Evans made there in the 1930s. That, coupled with an awareness of renewed voter suppression efforts at state and federal levels, inspired Abranowicz to explore the living legacy of the civil and voting rights movement through photographing locations, landscapes, and individuals associated with the struggle, from Rosa Parks and Harry Belafonte to the barn where Emmett Till was murdered.
The result is This Far and No Further, a collection of photographs from Abranowicz's journey through the American South. Through symbolism, metaphor, and history, he unearths extraordinary stories of brutality, heroism, sacrifice, and redemption hidden within ordinary American landscapes, underscoring the crucial necessity of defending—and exercising—our right to vote at this tenuous moment for American democracy.
[A] powerful work...Eye-opening and moving, these images commemorate the past and have the power to energize leaders of the future. * Publishers Weekly, Starred Review *
An earnest photographic exploration of some key loci of the Southern civil rights movement and its aftermath...Of interest as a visual record of ordinary places now exalted in history and memory. * Kirkus *
[An] enlightening chronicle of the struggle for voting rights in the American South. * Elle Decor *
ISBN: 9781477321744
Dimensions: 305mm x 229mm x 25mm
Weight: 1533g
200 pages