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November 18, 2008

If Obama Falters-American Scenes from the Great Depression

By GLloyd Rowsey

Walker Evans is probably the most famous American photographer of all time, worldwide.

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Walker Evans collaborated with the writer James Agee on a book which may have contributed more to the making of the New Deal than any other book ever written, "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men."-    

There follow six photographs by Walker Evans taken in these United States, between 1931 and 1936.  It was the time of America's Great Depression, a time still within the living memory of many of our grandparents.  And a time still indelibly imprinted in the minds of many Americans by Walker Evans' black-and-white photographs.

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 (Courtesy of artnet and its Artist Works Catalogues)



Authors Bio:
I have a law degree (Stanford, 66') but have never practiced. Instead, from 1967 through 1977, I tried to contribute to the revolution in America. As unsuccessful as everyone else over that decade, in 1978 I went to work for the U.S. Forest Service in San Francisco as a Clerk-Typist, GS-4. I was active in the USFS's union for several years, including a brief stint as editor of The Forest Service Monitor, the nationwide voice of the Forest Service in the National Federation of Federal Employees. Howsoever, I now believe my most important contribution while editor of the F.S.M. was bringing to the attention of F.S. employees the fact that the Black-Footed Ferret was not extinct; one had been found in 1980 on a national forest in the Colorado. In 2001 I retired from the USFS after attaining the age of 60 with 23 years of service. Stanford University was evidently unimpressed with my efforts to make USFS investigative reports of tort claim incidents available to tort claimants (ie, "the public"), alleging the negligence of a F.S. employee acting in the scope of his/her duties caused their damages, under the Freedom of Information Act. Oh well. What'cha gonna do?

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