Now available for the first time in paperback, Photography and social movements is the first thorough study of photographys interrelationship with social movements. Focusing on photographic production and dissemination during the student and worker uprising in Paris in May 1968, the Zapatista rebellion, and the anti-capitalist protests in Genoa in 2001, the book argues that at times of political uprisings, photographic documentations, often contradictory, strive to prevail in the public domain, extending the political or economic struggle to a representational level. Photography plays a central role in this representational conflict, by either reproducing or challenging stereotypical narratives of protest. This groundbreaking interdisciplinary analysis of a wide range of practices - amateur and professional - and of previously unpublished archival material will add considerably to students, researchers and scholars knowledge of both the visual imagery of political movements and the developing history of photographic representation.Introduction CHAPTER 1 1.1 Toute la presse est toxique: May 1968 in the mainstream French press 1.2 The Zapatistas and the media spectacle 1.3 When it bleeds, it leads: death and press photography in the anti-capitalist protests in Genoa 2001 CHAPTER 2 2.1 The student movement of May 1968: activist photography, self-reflection and antinomies 2.2 Zapatistas, photography and the internet or winning the game of visibility 2.3 Carnival against capitalism: global days of action & photographs of resistance CHAPTER 3 3.1 May 68 in the museum 3.2 The end of silence: Antonio Turoks photographs of the Zapatistas 3.3 Joel Sternfelds anti-photojournalistic images of Genoa CONCLUSION BIBLIOGRAPHY IndexThe first thorough study of photographys interrelationship with social movementsNow available for the first time in paperback, Photography and social movements is the first thorough study of photograplÑ