A photojournalist is first and foremost a reporter who writes in images. The definition is simple and immediately brings to mind a series of names and images that have gone down in history, such as Robert Capa and the Spanish Civil War, or Don McCullin and the Vietnam War.
While military and social conflicts still occupy a special place in the world of photojournalism, as evidenced by the coverage of the Russian army’s invasion of Ukraine, in recent decades photojournalists have broadened their focus to other realities, developing more unique visions and styles.
This book brings together 134 photographers working collectively. A unique journey through 30 years of photojournalism, this book offers a selection of the images they have taken that have marked their careers. Throughout its pages, these photographs paint a collective and unique portrait, sometimes subjective but always sharp, of the last three decades of our shared history.
This journey around the world is punctuated with testimonials from the photographers. All of them offer their vision of their profession and its evolution in light of the profound economic, technical, social, and even anthropological changes that have marked the past three decades.
