Susan Meiselas: Carnival Strippers Revisited

Hardback

Main Details

Title Susan Meiselas: Carnival Strippers Revisited
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Susan Meiselas
Edited by Felix Hoffmann
Text by Abigail Solomon-Godeau
Text by Sylvia Wolf
Designed by Bernard Fischer
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:264
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 275
Category/GenreIndividual photographers
ISBN/Barcode 9783969990025
ClassificationsDewey:779.97927
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Steidl Publishers
Imprint Steidl Verlag
Publication Date 7 April 2022
Publication Country Germany

Description

This is the new and expanded edition of Susan Meiselas' 1976 book Carnival Strippers, arguably one of the most important photographic projects of the second half of the twentieth century. From 1972 to 1975, Meiselas spent her summers photographing women who performed striptease for small-town carnivals in New England, Pennsylvania and South Carolina. As she followed the shows from town to town, she captured the dancers on stage and off, their public performances as well as private lives, creating a portrait both documentary and empathetic: "The recognition of this world is not the invention of it. I wanted to present an account of the girl show that portrayed what I saw and revealed how the people involved felt about what they were doing." Meiselas also taped candid interviews with the dancers, their boyfriends, the show managers and paying customers, which form a crucial part of the book. Meiselas' frank description of these women brought a hidden world to public attention, and explored the complex role the carnival played in their lives: mobility, money and liberation, but also undeniable objectification and exploitation. Produced during the early years of the women's movement, Carnival Strippers reflects the struggle for identity and self-esteem that characterized a complex era of change. Featuring largely unpublished additional photos, contact sheets and letters in its Making of Volume, Carnival Strippers Revisited gives new depth to Meiselas' influential vision. Any book allows its reader to distance himself. The curtain closing on the girl show stage is replaced by the page turning over. Like the show, the book represents coexistent aspects of a phenomenon, one which horrifies, one which honors. If the viewer is appalled by what follows, that reaction is not so different from the alienation of those who participate in the shows. - Susan Meiselas, 1976

Author Biography

Susan Meiselas has worked as a freelance documentary photographer since joining Magnum Photos in 1976. Her images, particularly those covering the hostilities in Central America during the insurrection, have been widely published and exhibited. Meiselas' many books include Carnival Strippers (1976), Nicaragua (1981), Kurdistan: In the Shadow of History (1997), a project on the 100-year visual history of Kurdistan, Pandora's Box (2001), exploring a New York S&M club, and Tar Beach (2020). In 1992 she received a MacArthur Fellowship, in 2015 a Guggenheim Fellowship, and in 2019 the Deutsche Boerse Photography Foundation Prize for her retrospective Mediations.

Reviews

A wonderfully illuminating insight into the making of a classic photobook.--Sean O'Hagan "Guardian" The pictures, which were shot in smoky low-light on black-and-white film in the original volume, cover both sides with candor and equanimity: the skin show of imperfect bodies and primordial gawkers out front and the world of female intimacy backstage. You can feel her affection for her subjects.--Lucy Sante "The New York Times Book Review" Unflinching, intimate and courageous. Like the best of journalism, they pull back the curtain on a group of people living in the shadows.--Kenneth Dickerman "Washington Post" In the decades since, the subculture has gone extinct as the sex industry has radically transformed, but "Carnival Strippers" remains a remarkable document of the time.--Johanna Fateman "New Yorker"