"These images dont change your mind; they smash through some of the warped lenses through which weve been taught to see." -- David Brooks - New York Times
"Beautifully crafted and contextualized.... the extant photographs illuminate American history and memory." -- The Washington Post
"A terrific new book." -- The New Yorker
"Striking. The most exciting images in the book are those that show us how these 19th-century portraits became, over the decades that follow, a part of the symbolic surround of the modern American landscape. The words in this highly visual book are perhaps even more powerful than the images. Pictures conveyed a precision akin to religious truth, an affective prerequisite for social movements." -- Matthew Pratt Guterl - The New Republic
"Nothing less than a masterpiece in the fields of biography, African-American history, and not least of all the neglected area of iconographyA riveting instant classic and a pure pleasure to behold." -- Harold Holzer, winner of the Lincoln Prize and author of Lincoln and the Power of the Press: The War for Public Opinion
"Picturing Frederick Douglass marries all of my present interests: legacies of slavery; beautiful images of a beautiful man; and the first theory of photography as a democratic medium capable of social change. Stunningly original and elegantly written and designed, it will inspire anyone interested in the links between the visual and the verbal." -- Sally Mann, author of Hold Still: A Memoir with Photographs
"Douglass emerges here out of photographic technology's earliest years, with majestic beauty, and through the power of his own self-creations. The book is the result of intrepid research and brilliant analysis; it charts Douglass's life visually, allowing him to look back at us wryly, wistfully, wrathfully." -- David W. Blight, Yale University, and author of Frederick Douglass: A Life
"In Picturing Frederick Douglass, Stauffer, Trodd, and Bernier offer exhilarating scholarship and our idea of Douglass and our sense of photography in nineteenth-century America are deepened. This is brilliant and very moving work." -- Darryl Pinckney, author of High Cotton, Out There and Black Balled: The Black Vote and U.S. Democracy
"Picturing Frederick Douglass marks a significant turn in the long history of Douglasss reception. Both as a subject for photography and as a critical theorist who reflected on the democratic, humane, and truth-telling powers of the medium, Douglass emerges in this beautiful volume in a completely new light." -- W. J. T. Mitchell, author of Seeing Through Race
"Picturing Frederick Douglass is to be shared, studied, read and repeated every six months, not only in the classroom but in our living roomsBeautifully researched and storiedA true treasure!" -- Deborah Willis, author of Reflections in Black and the acclaimed documentary, Through a Lens Darkly
"This stunning volume presents 160 photographs, some for the first time, and they not only follow Douglass throughout his life but also place him within the times he lived. Stauffer, Zoe Trodd, and Celeste-Marie Bernier point out that Douglass saw the truth-telling aspects of photography and how it could be used as a tool in the fight against slavery, as photos both humanized African Americans and revealed the horrors of their enslavement. This tour de force is a must-have that will enhance history and reference collections." -- Patricia Ann Owens - Library Journal, Starred review
"This illustrious book collects all 160 photographs of renowned abolitionist Frederick Douglass and astutely places Douglasss personal interest in photography into the context of his career and legacy. This study provides a multifaceted, unique look at one of the most influential figures of American history." -- Publishers Weekly
"An impressive collectiongive[s] a wonderful picture of the man, his intellect, and his devotion to his main cause, abolition. The authors have pieced together an illuminating life portrait without extraneous biographical material, focusing intensely on their subject's belief in the strength of photographs." -- Kirkus Reviews