Saturday, March 28, 2015

The Ethics of Photojournalism

The Ethics of Photojournalism

my personal ethics map


I chose an image I found while browsing the websites given to us in the assignment. I found this image and the story behind it so unethical that I wanted to share it with the reader's.

photo by : Brian Walski


       Brian submitted this photo of a British Soldier in Basra to the Los Angeles Times where it appeared on the front cover. The British soldier was a digital composite placed into the photo with the Iraqi civilians.
        This image was posted after the U.S invaded Iraq. According to FourandSix.com "Brian a staff photographer for the Los Angeles Times and a 30-year veteran of the news business, was fired after his editors discovered that he had combined two of his photographs to “improve” the composition."

       Personally doing something such as what Brian did for personal gain is morally wrong. It goes against my personal ethics which included integrity, respect, and caring. You are a respected 30 year veteran in your field and you go a head and create a false "story" The soldier wasn't their gesturing to the civilian's he was edited into that picture to make a great story. It did make it on the front cover of the LA Times, but from dishonesty. 
     This goes against my personal ethics of integrity. When someone thinks more about the $ sign and not about the people they could offend their careless. I could never imagine myself doing something like this to make some money. It shows a soldier in the photo's who seems to be caring, he gestures to the citizens maybe to stop and be careful, or to be safe. Who know's, but we now know that, that never happened. He never was caring or being helpful the image was doctored. 

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Women Photojournalist

Eman Mohammed
photo by Karen Eng


 According to the video posted by Nordell "Farzana has been harassed by men and want to take her camera away from her" Similarly to Mohammed.


photo by Eman Mohammed
photo taken :2013
Use of shadows The shadows seen are of the family walking along side the beach in Gaza, with the help of the suns glare.

Quality of Light: The light is from the sun, the subjects can not be made out but their shadows are colored by the rays of the sun.


Use of lines: the photo is taken infant of barbed wire along side the beach, the use of the barbed wire intrigued me, it looks almost like their imprisoned.

Why I chose? The sunlight and the wire intrigued me, and I really like photo's that use the sun to capture the subject's.



I found a link to several photo's that she has taken and came across a series of photo's entitled iWar.

Mohammed explained during the interview that
"iWar is about the long-term aftermath of war survivors and victims. It’s a series of portraits and a gentle, symbolic way to show that war has happened, and it’s still happening I tell them Show me your sadness, as though I don’t exist. Like I’m not even here.” I get them deep in the details, and then I get the shot. It’s energy consuming and emotionally draining, but it’s very powerful."

photo by Eman Mohammed
year created: 2014

http://blog.ted.com/eman-mohammed/
Subject’s Expression: the subject appears sad, she is sitting on a burnt motorcycle once ridden by her father who she never met, Mohammed asks her subjects to look sad  as if she's not their during the photo
Use of shadows : the photo shows the subject in light and the surrounding area around her is darkened, to me emphasizes the importance of the subject and nothing else
Depth of field : In this image the subject is in focus with the light that is on the subject. the rest of the image is darkened. Though we still can see what the image around the subject is the main subject which is the little girl is in focus
Why I chose: When i was doing the research this image just immediately stuck out to me, and i read the story behind it and it just touched me. This 2 year old girl is sitting on a burnt motorcycle that was once ridden by her father who was killed during an airstrike while riding this motorcycle , she never met him.





Women who faced discrimination in history:
photo by unknown
year taken 1941-45
KEEP IT SIMPLE   This photo is simple, it shows 3 women dressed as welders in the workforce conversation.
Obvious main subject, about ¼ to 2/3 of image area.  The 3 subjects take up the majority of the photo, showing their importance with a subtle background.
Background compliments or detracts from composition  The background actually helps complete the photo. The machinery pictured helps the viewer realize they are working at a factory.

Why I chose: I chose this image because it just represents our country and how we developed over time from being a male run workforce to a gender equal workforce


During WW2 women were needed in the workforce due to men being at war.

According the History.com staff “Rosie the Riveter,” star of a government campaign aimed at recruiting female workers for the munitions industry, became perhaps the most iconic image of working women during the war."

Their pay was significiantly less then the men, and the men thought they weren't capable of doing a their job as good as they could. According to the staff at History.com "Between 1940 and 1945, the female percentage of the U.S. workforce increased from 27 percent to nearly 37 percent"

Saturday, March 7, 2015