bighilt
Member
As someone who worked as a photojournalist in South Africa during the height of that country's turmoil I believe it is imperative that information is presented about the subject of the photograph.
Without that, the person being photographed is not real but merely a caricature of someone who is homeless, oppressed, disenfranchised...take your pick.
If the viewer feels any emotion at all it is likely to be only at a superficial level -- "That's terrible, something really should be done...please pass the sugar."
It's one thing to see an image of a grimy bum but quite another to know his name, that he is a father who hasn't seen his kids for five years and once lived in a nice home and had big dreams.
Without that, the person being photographed is not real but merely a caricature of someone who is homeless, oppressed, disenfranchised...take your pick.
If the viewer feels any emotion at all it is likely to be only at a superficial level -- "That's terrible, something really should be done...please pass the sugar."
It's one thing to see an image of a grimy bum but quite another to know his name, that he is a father who hasn't seen his kids for five years and once lived in a nice home and had big dreams.