Photographs are better at raising questions than answering them; they can reveal what you do not understand, and also what you take for granted. —Photographic historian Barbara Norfleet, writing in The Champion Pig
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Businessman Thomas J. Locke Jr. at his lake retreat, zoo, and lodge, south of Friendship Cemetery, by the Tombigbee River, August 18, 1934.
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Boy with bloodied nose.
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Florist and nurseryman Herman Owen (at left) with his 1937 Ford V8 and an unidentified man in a field of oats, circa 1938–39.
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EDITORS’ NOTE Alexa Dilworth, Wesley Hogan, and Tom Rankin Editors, Documentary Arts and Culture Series
O. N. Pruitt’s Possum Town: Photographing Trouble and Resilience in the American South embodies the capacity of a single archive to speak powerfully about race, class, historical memory, and the lasting resonance of images. Berkley Hudson’s careful, relentless investigations into Pruitt’s forty years of photographing provide not only a record of the life of a single Mississippi community in the twentieth century but also a window on the long and shifting meaning of photographs through and across time. Pruitt’s compelling body of work, along with Hudson’s associated narratives of Columbus, Mississippi, and the surrounding county, stand as a visual record and expression of wider truths about the cultural history of the American South. There is both privilege and tragedy in this kind of documentary remembrance; ordinary and mundane scenes coexist alongside ones of extraordinary violence. As with other titles in our Documentary Arts and Culture series, this book presents the work of a photographer who was engaged in one locale for an extended period of time and who was deeply familiar with many of the people and places he photographed. While Pruitt was a commercial photographer, often hired to photograph people as they wanted to be seen, he also never went far without a camera, seemingly forever attuned to the possibilities of photographing. Though Pruitt left little articulation of his overall intent, it is through the depth of documentation created by his persistent and layered vision—in the studio and beyond—that we witness an unfolding documentary view that speaks to the complexity and multiplicity of voices within O. N. Pruitt’s photographic vision and archive.
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O. N. Pruitt (right) with son Lambuth (left) and Pruitt’s brother Jim. Lambuth later worked as a photographer in Jackson as did Jim in nearby Starkville, circa 1925.
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Main Street northwest corner at intersection with Market Street, late 1940s.
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Columbus’s Main Street viewed from atop Gilmer Hotel at intersection with Catfish Alley, late 1920s.
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Potato farmers with politicianfarmer Johnny Williams (left foreground), Caledonia, Mississippi, circa 1930s.
Potato farmers with politicianfarmer Johnny Williams (left foreground), Caledonia, Mississippi, circa 1930s.
Mr. Gaynes’s chickens.
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Alligator Lake, circa 1930s. Jim Wilder (center) holds a spoonbill catfish. William Jimmison is at far left.
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Jack and Jill Kindergarten, circa May Day 1958. Joy Dill (center) wears a flowered headband.
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Hunt High School girls basketball team, circa 1950s.
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First Methodist Church’s “Old Women’s Dinner,” October 15, 1952.
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“Missionary Baptist Sunday School and B.T.U. Convention,” July 18, 1952.
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Swarm of bees, Main Street, circa 1930s.
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