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Book of the Week: Raised by Wolves | Next
Quote of the Week
The photographer is an author because he decides on the moment, but reality speaks extremely forcefully — it is the main author of the image.
Gilles Peress
Friday, Nov. 10, 2006
Vietnam Veterans' Memorial
Thursday, Nov. 9, 2006
The Berlin Wall (Fell this day, 1989)
Wednesday, Nov. 8, 2006
China's Yangtze River
Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2006
Museum (of Modern Art) Watching
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(c) Jim Goldberg / Magnum Photos
NEW YORK—"Echo's Class Picture," 1992.
© Jim Goldberg / Magnum Photos
Interactive Essays
One Race. 37,000 Stories.Khmer Boxing
One Race. 37,000 Stories.
by Alex Majoli

The ING New York City Marathon is arguably the biggest, most important event in the world of running. But more than this, it is the thousands of runners from all over the world coming together to test their strength, stamina, and will. This is their story.

American Color
by Constantine Manos

Photographing mostly in exotic locales and at public events within the United States, Constantine Manos presents a kaleidoscopic view of American culture. As a showcase of the sundry layers of American society, the images are also a retrospective, presenting a man's curiosity for his country's diversity.

Magnum in Motion Video Podcasts
book
Book of the Week: <i>Raised by Wolves</i>
Book of the Week: Raised by Wolves
by Jim Goldberg
Jim Goldberg documented the lives of teenage runaways from 1987 to 1993 in San Francisco and Los Angeles. In Raised by Wolves, he has compiled the photographs, video stills, found documents, and handwritten texts by the subjects he followed to create a scrapbook that shows the dangerous challenges America’s displaced youths face on the streets.
focus
Zoom In: Borders
Zoom In: Borders
by Magnum Photographers
Borders create and define land and identity. The safeguarding, disruption, and shifting of these lines through war or other means has and continues to shape civilization. This week’s Zoom In explores the symbolism of borders.

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