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Danger pay : memoir of a photojournalist in the Middle East, 1984-1994 / by Carol Spencer Mitchell ; edited by Ellen Spencer Susman.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Mitchell, Carol Spencer, 1954-2004.
- Series:
- Focus on American history series.
- Focus on American history series
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Mitchell, Carol Spencer, 1954-2004.
- Mitchell, Carol Spencer.
- Photojournalists--United States--Biography.
- Photojournalists.
- Arab countries--Description and travel.
- Arab countries.
- Arab countries--Pictorial works.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (216 p.)
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Austin, TX : University of Texas Press, 2008.
- Language Note:
- English
- Summary:
- "You're going where?" Carol Spencer Mitchell's father demanded as she set off in 1984 to cover the Middle East as a photojournalist for Newsweek and other publications. In this intensely thoughtful memoir, Spencer Mitchell probes the motivations that impelled her, a single, Jewish woman, to document the turmoil roiling the Arab world in the 1980s and 1990s, as well as how her experiences as a photojournalist "compelled [me] to set aside [my] cameras and reexamine the way images are created, scenes are framed, and how 'real life' is packaged for specific news stories." In Danger Pay, Spencer Mitchell takes us on a harrowing journey to PLO military training camps for Palestinian children and to refugee camps in the Gaza Strip before, during, and after the first intifada. Through her eyes, we experience the media frenzy surrounding the 1985 hijackings of TWA Flight #847 and the Italian cruise liner Achille Lauro. We meet Middle Eastern leaders, in particular Yasser Arafat and King Hussein of Jordan, with whom Spencer Mitchell developed close working relationships. And we witness Spencer Mitchell's growing conviction that the Western media's portrayal of conflicts in the Middle East actually helps to fuel those conflicts—a conviction that eventually, as she says, "shattered my career." Although the events that Spencer Mitchell records took place a generation ago, their repercussions reverberate in the conflicts going on in the Middle East today. Likewise, her concern about "the triumph of image over reality" takes on greater urgency as our knowledge of the world becomes ever more filtered by virtual media.
- Contents:
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue
- There's a new kid in town. The burning bush
- Reorienting
- Crossing the bridge
- Ode to Abu Ammar
- Gaza slick
- Photo op
- A room with a view
- The moment and the mask. His majesty
- Let's get some color
- House of Hashem
- Up, up, and away
- Private conversations (I)
- Passing through. TWA flight #847
- Exile
- Cruising
- Caviar, khat, and cover pix
- Inside terror, Inc. Dance into darkness
- Journalists are used to danger
- He who builds
- Private conversations (II)
- Promise me I won't be touched
- Lebanon
- Travels in Sudan. Sorry, all lines are jammed
- Wau (wow!)
- I don't know what I'm feeling
- You need something to peg the story on
- The striptease. Everybody must get stoned
- Photo-realism, The "real" picture, and the ingathering
- The striptease
- The mother of all battles. What the hell am I doing?
- The sealed room
- The striptease, take 2
- Epilogue. The old man
- War on another front.
- Notes:
- Description based upon print version of record.
- ISBN:
- 0-292-79382-0
- OCLC:
- 1286808179
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