Shooting the Russian War

Margaret BOURKE-WHITE

Item#: 114996 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Shooting the Russian War
Shooting the Russian War
Shooting the Russian War
Shooting the Russian War

"FOR… MY HANDSOME CHAUFFEUR AND GOOD FRIEND": FIRST EDITION OF BOURKE-WHITE'S SHOOTING THE RUSSIAN WAR, WITH 89 DRAMATIC HALFTONE PHOTOGRAPHIC PLATES, WARMLY INSCRIBED BY BOURKE-WHITE TO A FRIEND

BOURKE-WHITE, Margaret. Shooting the Russian War. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1942. Octavo, original gray cloth, original photographic dust jacket.

First edition of this photobook chronicling the German invasion of the Soviet Union, with 89 black-and-white halftone plates of the Soviet Union at war, inscribed to her friend: "For Don Hartman, my handsome chauffeur and good friend, with all my best—Margaret Bourke-White."

"One of the first photojournalists hired by Life, Margaret Bourke-White helped create and define the look of picture magazines in the United States" (New York Times). She made her first trip to the Soviet Union in 1930, and was the "first foreign photographer to be given access to Soviet industrial sites" (Parr & Badger, 119). In May 1941 she returned to the Soviet Union accompanied by husband Erskine Caldwell. After a fierce German attack only two months later, Bourke-White became the only non-Russian photographer permitted to record the struggles of a country under siege, at one point filming the bombing of Moscow with up to four cameras, each set at a different time exposure to catch the "unearthly beauty unfolding before the lens," a world where "all time was thrown out of joint… The size of the raid," she writes, "was measured by whether it was a two-camera, three-camera, or four-camera night." With 89 halftone photographic plates, glossary and appendix. Bookseller ticket.

Book with a bit of toning to extremities, dust jacket with only light wear to extremities. A near-fine inscribed copy.

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