In Light and Shadow

A Photographic History from Indigenous America
by Brian Adams, Sarah Stacke
$40.00

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A landmark photography collection featuring work exclusively by Indigenous Americans, shedding new light on the understanding of Indigenous America.

The history of photography–and the Americas–is incomplete without the critical work and perspectives of Indigenous American photographers. Since the 1800s, cameras have been in the hands of Indigenous people and they...
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Published By Black Dog & Leventhal

Format Hardback

Category

Number Of Pages 304

Publication Date 09/23/2025

ISBN 9780762482467

Dimensions 8.5 inches x 10.3 inches


In Light and Shadow is an essential book that reshapes, transforms, and reframes the biased narrative of our existence in the Americas. Outsiders have been exploiting our images since the invention of photography and film, but finally we have a collection of our own photographers embodying the humor, spirit, pain, beauty, and love of our own people…A story that humanizes us one image at a time.”—Sterlin Harjo, filmmaker and 2024 MacArthur Fellow

“Offering biographical summaries and selections of work from eighty photographers and spanning more than a century of image-making, In Light and Shadow is a glimpse into generally unknown records of Indigenous American art and life. The book is an exciting and significant contribution to the history of photography and to the ongoing redefinition of the photographic canon.” 
 —Kathryn Humphries, art director, Harper’s Magazine

“This remarkable collection demonstrates how Indigenous people from across the Americas use photography for their own purposes. In their hands, images become a means to define community identities on their own terms, preserve cultures and histories, and advance political claims, including those surrounding land. In Light and Shadow compels us to see Native America in a new way.”—Shari Huhndorf, Class of 1938 Professor of Native American Studies, University of California, Berkeley

“This book constitutes a relevant visual contribution to the collective postcolonial process that is taking place on the American continent. Indigenous peoples have resisted for centuries, using their own public appearance as an element that plays between light and shadow, to the point that we have believed them extinct or totally co-opted. However, they are there, whispering in our ears, que la luz será mañana para los más.”—Natalia Arcos Salvo, researcher and curator

 
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