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註釋Among the distinguished and much-praised group of photographers who worked for the Farm Security Administration during the depression, Marion Post Wolcott has been, until recently, relatively unknown. In this definitive biography, F. Jack Hurley shows her to be a photographer of great skill, sensitivity, vision, and humanity. He also demonstrates that her contribution to the great documentary file assembled at the FSA under the direction of Roy Stryker is unique. In addition to the now-classic images of sharecroppers and tenant farmer families, made by all the photographers, Marion Post Wolcott did studies of the affluent--relaxing on Florida beaches, shopping in resort communities, attending horse races and charity balls. Often on her own initiative, and in between the massive assignments she got from Washington, Marion Post Wolcott made innumerable photographs of the contrasts, not just the dark side, of the depression, and she did it with wit and compassion. Using the considerable correspondence between Marion Post Wolcott and Roy Stryker, Hurley presents a revealing glimpse of what is was like--the rewards and numerous travails--to be a young woman traveling alone through the backcountry and in some of the roughest of this country's rural sections, as well as in cities like Miami and Memphis. --jacket.