About to Die
How News Images Move the Public
Barbie Zelizer
Reviews and Awards
Winner of the Tankard Book Award, Association for Education in Journalism & Mass Communication
Recipient of the NCA Distinguished Scholar Award
Winner of the Marshall McLuhan Award for Outstanding Book in the Field of Media Ecology, Media Ecology Association
"Zelizer bolsters her arguments with extensive primary research, including readers' reactions from letters to the editor and blog postings regarding daring and shocking images. Her seventy-nine pages of notes are a treasure trove to readers and researchers because they are so detailed and thorough." --Journalism History
"Why are some deaths fit spectacles for the camera and others off-limits? What philosophical and social purposes do news images serve? Barbie Zelizer answers such questions in this ambitious new book, a stunning examination of a little-explored aspect of modern journalism." --Phillip Knightley, author of The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth-Maker From The Crimea To Kosovo
"In Barbie Zelizer's most powerful, profound, and disturbing work, she shows that news photos do not document reality but are suspended precariously between the 'as is' and the 'as if,' touching feelings, touching off imaginations. With an astonishing cascade of evidence about iconic news images and the stories behind them, Zelizer offers little comfort, no certainty, but much illumination." --Michael Schudson, author of Why Democracies Need an Unlovable Press
"[About to Die] is an audacious and often chilling examination of how visual media handle the moment of death, from engravings of the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 to the Pacific tsunami of 2004. With an obvious and admitted debt to the academy's favorite photography buff Susan Sontag, Zelizer treats these images as both rare and powerful."--The Austin Chronicle
"[An] enlightening new book" --Slate.com
"[Zelizer] produced an engaging history, with accounts of the best-known about-to-die images and their post-publication trajectories." --Obit-mag.com
"If, like me, you think that Big Money exerts ever more influence on the way politics gets covered in this country; and if, like me, you think that Citizens United, the recent Supreme Court decision that lifts the lid on corporate campaign spending, will speed up, reinforce and otherwise extend this unfortunate trend; and if, like me, you believe that for the past fifty years the main way corporate money has worked its electoral will is by manipulating news images via television commercials (watch Mad Men if you don't believe me), then you will want to read Barbie Zelizer's new book, About to Die . . . a refutation of this 'words matter and images don't' perspective . . . [a] densely packed, closely reasoned book." --Victor Navasky, The Nation
"An extraordinary contribution to the literature...Aside from value of the theoretical construct within which Zelizer contextualizes specific images (and types of images), there is value in her fair, reasoned, and engaging investigation of the authenticity and authority of certain of the most controversial photographs of the past century." --Political Communication