Difference between revisions of "328--Week 10 Questions/Comments"
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I liked how the photos strived to capture average people in their daily activies rather than workers in action. I don't think that Bubley was trying persuade any ideal or stereotype but rather was quickly capturing groups of people and showing how different the work force had become during WWII. I thought that the photo of the women on the stairs waiting for the boarding house bathroom did show the hours of work the women had put in and the exhaustion they were facing. -- Meredith Bojarski | I liked how the photos strived to capture average people in their daily activies rather than workers in action. I don't think that Bubley was trying persuade any ideal or stereotype but rather was quickly capturing groups of people and showing how different the work force had become during WWII. I thought that the photo of the women on the stairs waiting for the boarding house bathroom did show the hours of work the women had put in and the exhaustion they were facing. -- Meredith Bojarski | ||
| + | The picture of Esther Bubley is hot. It's VERY different from the photographs of women we've seen so far. First of all, she's wearing pants, second of all just the way she's posing and the clothes she's wearing and just her whole demeanor screams "I can do anything a man can!" I'm also glad that the women who took over the industries were able to wear pants, made work a lot safer but of course it took other women to realize this. - Emely Amaya | ||
I have always been fascinated with older photography. You can read so much into the lives of women back then by their clothing, there mannerisms, and what they are doing.--Nikole Wellman | I have always been fascinated with older photography. You can read so much into the lives of women back then by their clothing, there mannerisms, and what they are doing.--Nikole Wellman | ||