The Oxford project

Peter Feldstein

Book - 2008

"The Oxford project is a living time capsule that challenges assumptions and shatters stereotypes as it reveals the extraordinary true tale of one seemingly ordinary American town. Its power is grounded in a captivating series of then-and-now portraits of Oxford residents - taken in 1984 and again today - and in the confessional first-person prose accompanying each pair of photographs. In these pages, the story of two decades unfolds before your eyes"--Page 4 of cover.

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REF/IOWA/977.7655/Feldstein/2008
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Location Call Number   Status
Iowa Reference Collection REF/IOWA/977.7655/Feldstein/2008 Library Use Only
Subjects
Genres
Nonfiction
photobooks
Anecdotes
Biographies
Photobooks
Portraits
Published
New York : Welcome Books ©2008.
Language
English
Main Author
Peter Feldstein (photographer)
Other Authors
Stephen G. Bloom (-), Gerald M. Stern, 1937- (writer of preface)
Physical Description
287 pages : illustrations, maps ; 33 cm
ISBN
9781599620480
  • Preface / by Gerald Stern
  • Oxford 1984 : the original portraits
  • Oxford at a glance : "then and now"
  • Introduction : "the Oxford project : who we are" / by Stephen G. Bloom.
Review by Library Journal Review

In this cleverly designed and artfully illustrated publication, artist Feldstein and Bloom (journalism & mass communication, Univ. of Iowa; Postville: A Clash of Cultures in Heartland America) document inhabitants of the small town of Oxford, IA, with more than 300 black-and-white photographic portraits and first-person narratives. Feldstein, who was living in Oxford in 1984, offered to photograph for free all the town's residents; 20 years later, he photographed as many of his previous subjects as he could locate, and Bloom interviewed 100 of the residents. Masterfully and collaboratively conceived, this book consists of demographic, historical, and visual data about Oxford and snapshots of the town's inhabitants in 1984 juxtaposed to those taken in present times, many of which are offset by their stories. Of significance to humanities scholars and social scientists as well as to general readers who may relate to its subjects, this work provides a good glimpse of small-town America but is unlikely to be the most authoritative vision. Accompanying a traveling exhibition to China and Italy, this publication is strongly recommended for many undergraduate academic, large public, and local library collections, particularly those encompassing documentary photography and narrative journalism.--Cheryl Ann Lajos, Free Lib. of Philadelphia (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.