The Way I See It

A powerful memoir of an extraordinary life behind the lens, chronicling apartheid South Africa and beyond.

Jürgen Schadeberg's iconic photographs are etched into history: Nelson Mandela gazing through the bars of his Robben Island cell; a young Miriam Makeba dancing; Hugh Masekela receiving a trumpet from Louis Armstrong; the Women's March of 1955; the Sophiatown removals; the Sharpeville massacre victims' funeral. But the story of the man behind the camera is no less remarkable.

Schadeberg's empathy for the persecuted was deeply rooted by the time he arrived in South Africa from Germany in 1950 to capture history for Drum magazine. This evocative memoir, which won the South African Literary Awards Creative Non-Fiction Award, spans over 50 years across Europe, Africa, and the United States. From witnessing the repressive Nazi regime and Allied bombings as a child in Berlin to fending for himself in devastated post-war Germany, Schadeberg's resilience shines through. Tragically, Schadeberg passed away on 29 August 2020, but his visual storytelling legacy lives on in The Way I See It.

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The Way I See It

A powerful memoir of an extraordinary life behind the lens, chronicling apartheid South Africa and beyond.

Jürgen Schadeberg's iconic photographs are etched into history: Nelson Mandela gazing through the bars of his Robben Island cell; a young Miriam Makeba dancing; Hugh Masekela receiving a trumpet from Louis Armstrong; the Women's March of 1955; the Sophiatown removals; the Sharpeville massacre victims' funeral. But the story of the man behind the camera is no less remarkable.

Schadeberg's empathy for the persecuted was deeply rooted by the time he arrived in South Africa from Germany in 1950 to capture history for Drum magazine. This evocative memoir, which won the South African Literary Awards Creative Non-Fiction Award, spans over 50 years across Europe, Africa, and the United States. From witnessing the repressive Nazi regime and Allied bombings as a child in Berlin to fending for himself in devastated post-war Germany, Schadeberg's resilience shines through. Tragically, Schadeberg passed away on 29 August 2020, but his visual storytelling legacy lives on in The Way I See It.

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The Way I See It

The Way I See It

by Jürgen Schadeberg
The Way I See It

The Way I See It

by Jürgen Schadeberg

eBook

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Overview

A powerful memoir of an extraordinary life behind the lens, chronicling apartheid South Africa and beyond.

Jürgen Schadeberg's iconic photographs are etched into history: Nelson Mandela gazing through the bars of his Robben Island cell; a young Miriam Makeba dancing; Hugh Masekela receiving a trumpet from Louis Armstrong; the Women's March of 1955; the Sophiatown removals; the Sharpeville massacre victims' funeral. But the story of the man behind the camera is no less remarkable.

Schadeberg's empathy for the persecuted was deeply rooted by the time he arrived in South Africa from Germany in 1950 to capture history for Drum magazine. This evocative memoir, which won the South African Literary Awards Creative Non-Fiction Award, spans over 50 years across Europe, Africa, and the United States. From witnessing the repressive Nazi regime and Allied bombings as a child in Berlin to fending for himself in devastated post-war Germany, Schadeberg's resilience shines through. Tragically, Schadeberg passed away on 29 August 2020, but his visual storytelling legacy lives on in The Way I See It.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781770105300
Publisher: Picador Africa
Publication date: 09/01/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 480
File size: 12 MB
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About the Author

JÜRGEN SCHADEBERG was born in Berlin in 1931. While still in his teens, he worked as an apprentice photographer for a press agency in Hamburg. In 1950 he emigrated to South Africa and became chief photographer, picture editor and art director at Drum magazine. In 1964 Schadeberg left South Africa for London. During the sixties and seventies he freelanced as a photojournalist in Europe and America. He also taught at the New School in New York, the Central School of Art & Design in London and the Hoch Kunst School in Hamburg, before returning to South Africa in 1985 for 22 years. His body of work, which spans more than 70 years and incorporates a collection of some 200 000 negatives, captures a wealth of timeless and iconic images that have been widely exhibited and showcased. Schadeberg, in partnership with his wife, Claudia, continues to work actively on new major photographic projects, books and exhibitions, and to make his own silver archival hand prints. He and Claudia currently live in Spain.
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