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By Greg MacGregor
Introduction by James P. Ronda
Edited by Iris Tillman Hill
Lewis and Clark Revisited
takes us on a stunning visual journey through contemporary America. Almost
ten years ago photographer Greg MacGregor began his journey, camera in
hand, following the rivers west and, like Lewis and Clark, he found a
country “transformed by generations of human habitation.”
In photographs that range from remarkable and beautiful views to powerful
and unsettling images of decay, from the gently humorous to the deeply
elegiac, MacGregor’s eye never strays from its search for ways to
see and understand the American landscape and the people who shaped it.
Like others drawn to the story of the expedition, MacGregor found inspiration
in the writings of Lewis and Clark. Their journals provided him with another
lens through which to look, the lens of history, and he used their words
as his guidebook to follow the human imprint on the old route. The book
includes many delightful and revealing extracts from the journals. These
historical texts take us back to the time of Lewis and Clark while they
illuminate the world represented in MacGregor’s contemporary photographs.
The interplay of words and images reveals the multiple faces of the landscape
and reminds us of the origins of this great story two hundred years ago.
Lewis and Clark Revisited
offers rare insight into the American experience, asking us to examine,
as Ronda aptly puts it, “who we were then, who we are now, and who
we might become.”
Published by the University
of Washington Press with Lyndhurst Books of the Center for Documentary
Studies at Duke University.
October 2003
224 pp., 97 duotone illus., 10” x 8”
$50.00 cloth, ISBN 0-295-98342-6
$29.95 paper, ISBN 0-295-98343-4
Greg MacGregor is professor of photography
at California State University, Haywood, and author of Overland:
The California Emigrant Trail of 1841-1970.
His work has been exhibited throughout the United States and abroad and
is in the permanent collections of over twenty major public museums.
Iris Tillman Hill
is editorial director of Lyndhurst Books at the Center for Documentary
Studies. She was the editor of Beyond
the Barricades: Photographs of Twenty South African Photographers.
James P. Ronda
holds the H. G. Barnard Chair in Western History at the University of
Tulsa.
An exhibition of photographs from Lewis
and Clark Revisited is traveling to more
than fifteen cities throughout the United States as part of the nationwide
commemoration of the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial. Venues include the
Washington State Historical Society, Sioux City Art Center, Jefferson
National Expansion Memorial, and Philadelphia Museum of Art, among others.
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Road kill, Highway 12, Santee Sioux Indian Reservation, Nebraska

Original river channel, near Washburn, North Dakota 
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