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09.09.2009: new book on St. James, Mo., features photographs of Missouri School of Journalism students and Missouri Photo Workshop participants
New Book on St. James, Mo., Features Photographs of Missouri School of Journalism Students and Missouri Photo Workshop Participants
Project Also Serves as a Master's Project for Joshua A. Bickel
By Angela Hamilton
Master's Student
Missouri School of Journalism
Columbia, Mo. (Sept. 9, 2009) -- St. James: The People of Missouri's "Forest City of the Ozarks," a collaborative book project of Missouri School of Journalism students and professional photojournalists, will be released this week. The publication coincides with the St. James' 76th annual Grape and Fall Festival on Sept. 10-12 and the start of the fourth stage of the Tour of Missouri bicycle race in that community.
St. James: The People of Missouri's "Forest City of the Ozarks"
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Joshua A. Bickel,
MA '09, editor
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The 176-page book, available in both hard and soft covers, features photographs taken during the 60th Missouri Photo Workshop (MPW) and a similar experience for photojournalism students enrolled in their capstone course. Situated among rolling hills and surrounded by trees, the highly photogenic St. James, with just one main street comprising the downtown district, is the so-called doorstep of the Ozarks.
The September 2008 MPW attracted 40 photographers from all corners of America and eight countries. Founded in 1949 by Clifton C. Edom, MPW brings together professional photographers from around the world to document small-town Missouri life with a camera. Edom was a Missouri professor many have labeled as the "father of photojournalism." He began the photojournalism sequence at the School when he joined the faculty in 1943. Edom also was the founder of Pictures of the Year International, a prestigious photo competition now more than 60 years old.
Rita Reed, associate professor of photojournalism who spent part of her childhood in St. James, offered a follow-up "Mini-MO-Pho" to the 16 students in her fall 2008 capstone titled "Picture Story and the Photographic Essay." The students, like the professional workshop photographers, got to live in St. James as an immersion experience and document the lives of its citizens.
Joshua Bickel, MA '09, whose master's project was fulfilled through his work on the St. James book, headed up the production, compiling the work from the Missouri Photo Workshop and from Reed's photojournalism class. Students in a copyediting course taught by Maggie Walter, associate professor of print and digital news, assisted with editing during the spring 2009 semester.
Select Images:
St. James: The People of Missouri's "Forest City of the Ozarks"
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"The biggest challenge was the scale," Bickel said. "I worked on the book from the start of the workshop last September through mid-August. I've never worked on a project that was this big, both in number of pages and in the amount of time I spent on it."
Bickel received guidance and encouragement from his master's committee, which included Reed as well as David Rees, chair of the photojournalism faculty, and Joy Mayer, a member of the print and digital news faculty and design editor for the Columbia Missourian.
Jim Sterling, the Missouri Community Newspaper Management chair, also assisted with the project. Sterling, who worked alongside Edom during his tenure at the Missouri Press Association 45 years ago, noted that the Missouri Photo Workshop has been a very bright moment in the history of the communities. "When the dean asked if I could help out, I was excited to do it," he said.
Based on this experience, Bickel would like to work on a similar project in the future. He now serves as an adjunct instructor at the School and as director of photography for the Missourian. The experience in St. James provided real-life training that has carried over to his work on the Missourian.
"As the director of photography, I have to manage a considerable number of student photographers and photo editors, all while making sure that their time at the Missourian is educational as well as professional. Working on this project taught me a lot about the nuances of picture editing, which I try to pass along to the students in the picture editing and photo desk management class that I teach," Bickel said.
Noting that it was very satisfying to him personally to work on the book from beginning to end, Bickel said, "I hope the people of the town look at this and see an honest portrait of themselves and are proud of it, too."
St. James: The People of Missouri's "Forest City of the Ozarks" can be purchased at the festival or by contacting Rees. The hardbound edition is $29.95; softcover, $19.95. Bickel will be on hand to sign copies of the book during the Grape and Fall Festival on Sept. 10-12. Hardbound copies of the book will be presented and dedicated at each of St. James' four libraries.
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Aug. 27, 2008: Missouri Photojournalism Faculty and Students Document Life in Historic Arrow Rock, Mo. Photojournalism faculty and students at the Missouri School of Journalism recently released a new book about the village of Arrow Rock at the Arrow Rock State Historic Site Visitor Center. The three-year project was under the direction of faculty members Rita Reed and David Rees with student editors Abigail Pheiffer, MA '08, Leah Gallo, MA '08, and graduate student Shane Epping. [More]
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June 18, 2008: Missouri School of Journalism Places First Overall in 2007-2008 Hearst Competition, Wins $37,900 in Prizes The Missouri School of Journalism placed first overall in the 2007-2008 Hearst Journalism Awards Program, an elite national collegiate journalism competition that culminated with finals held in San Francisco from June 1-6. In total, 16 of the School's students placed in the different writing, photojournalism and broadcast news competitions over the yearlong Hearst awards program, which is often called the "Pulitzers of College Journalism." [More]
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Feb. 28, 2008: Around the World with Movie Director Tim Burton Missouri School of Journalism photojournalism graduate student Leah Gallo used skills she learned during her master's program to get a job photographing on the set of the movie Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Photojournalism students have many avenues to use their skills, other than traditional jobs. [More]
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Nov. 30, 2007: New Center to Preserve and Showcase Historical Photojournalism Collections An unparalleled documentary photojournalism resource at the Missouri School of Journalism will be dedicated next September during the centennial of the School and the dedication of the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute. The Angus and Betty McDougall Center for Photojournalism Studies, named for the renowned photography innovator and educator and his wife, will preserve collections of photographs by newspaper, magazine and documentary photographers. [More]
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Oct. 26, 2007: Celebrated Photojournalist Delivers Two-day Seminar on Fundamentals of Web Video Time-Life photojournalist and 2007 Missouri Honor Medalist Dirck Halstead visited the School Oct. 10-11 to deliver his "Platypus Short Course," a two-day crash tutorial based on his standard nine-day workshop. The workshop surfaced as a result of Halstead's Platypus Papers, a manifesto he wrote in 1997 that compares new-age visual journalists to the platypus, a species that defied established classification systems. [More]
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Nov. 15, 2006: Judging of National College Photography Competition Now Online through Vodcasting For decades Missouri School of Journalism photojournalism students have had the unique opportunity to observe and collaborate with professionals during the annual College Photographer of the Year (CPOY) contests. Remote audience members can now go online and watch the judging of some 12,500 images in 16 different categories, including spot news, sports action, feature and more. [More]
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April 4, 2006: Missouri Photojournalism Students Win Pictures of the Year International Awards The work of more than 25 Columbia Missourian photo editors and staff photographers and a recent Missouri School of Journalism student were among the top winners at the 63rd annual Pictures of the Year International (POYi) contest. The steep global competition of the contest's entries makes the Missouri Journalism wins even more significant. [More]
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Jan. 23, 2006: Award-Winning Photojournalist Ami Vitale to Visit Missouri for Lecture Ami Vitale, an award-winning photojournalist best known for her international news and cultural documentation work with Getty, will share insights and tips with Missouri School of Journalism students and other interested persons at an upcoming presentation at 7 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 26, in the University of Missouri Museum of Art and Archaeology in Pickard Hall. A reception will follow the 90-minute lecture in the Cast Gallery. [More]
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Dec. 8, 2005: Recent Alumnus Wins First Place Hearst Photojournalism Award Chris Detrick, a 2005 photojournalism graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism, won first place in the photojournalism competition of the 2005-06 Hearst Journalism Awards Program. This was the first Hearst photojournalism competition of this academic year, entered by 74 students from 43 journalism schools nationwide. [More]
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April 25, 2005: Missouri School of Journalism Grad Wins Hearst Photojournalism Award Lara Shipley, a recent photojournalism graduate from the Missouri School of Journalism, was awarded fifth place in the Picture Story/Series Competition of the 2004-2005 Hearst Journalism Awards Program. Shipley, BJ '04, recently spent one month in Peru documenting the environmental and health crisis resulting from a metallurgic plant in a small Andean town, La Oroya. Last year, Shipley spent nine months in Costa Rica, where she interned as a photographer for a national paper, La Nacion. [More]
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