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註釋Presents the rediscovered photographs of Henry Clay Anderson (1911- 1998), a truly prolific professional photographer who worked in Greenville, Mississippi at the beginning of the Civil Rights movement, chronicling the daily lives of a proud, dignified community of middle-class Blacks. The narration, by a writer and a filmmaker, is provocative, insightful; the photographs are at once beautiful, sad, joyous, and haunting, encompassing childbirth, birthday parties, beauty pageants, weddings, and funerals. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR