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Stan Honda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Stan Honda
NationalityAmerican
Occupationphotojournalist
Known forcreator of iconic and widely republished photos
Honda's photo of Marcy Borders, a distressed survivor of the World Trade Center collapse, has been very widely republished.

Stan Honda is an American photojournalist.[1]

Career

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Honda's first job as a professional photojournalist, following working as a volunteer photojournalist at the Krampus newspaper of the University of California at San Diego, was a 1981 gig at the Daily Californian.[2] Since then, Honda has been employed by numerous publications, including: the San Diego Union Tribune, the Los Angeles Times, New York Newsday, The National Post, and Agence France-Presse.

Honda is known for capturing one of the most iconic images of the aftereffects of al Qaeda's attacks of September 11, 2001, a photo of Marcy Borders, a survivor of the collapse of the World Trade Center, so completely covered in white dust, that a viewer would have to look twice to recognize that she was African-American.[3] She became known as "The Dust Lady".

In 2005, the journal Visual Resources published a special issue devoted to "Photojournalism, Mass Media and the Politics of Spectacle".[2] An interview with Honda formed an eight-page chapter of this issue of the journal. That interview focussed on Honda's photos of the after-effects on the World Trade Center attack, his photos of survivors the World War 2 internment of those of Japanese descent, and of his photos while embedded with American soldiers during the 21st century American invasion and occupation of Iraq.

In March 2015, Honda wrote under his own byline, when he described his trip to the remote Arctic Island of Svalbard to record a rare total solar eclipse.[4]

Honda produced a VHS narrative of a selection of some of iconic images, entitled "Eyewitness: Stan Honda - Reflections of a Photojournalist."[5]

Honda is also an amateur astronomer; he has given lectures on photographing the night sky.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Stan Honda captures the stars". Yahoo News. 2015. Retrieved 2015-08-27.
  2. ^ a b Amy Lyford, Carol Payne (2005). "Photojournalism, Mass Media and the Politics of Spectacle". Visual Resources. 21 (2): 147–154.
  3. ^ J. Freedom du Lac (2015-08-26). "'Dust Lady' Marcy Borders, featured in haunting Sept. 11 photo, dies of cancer: Before she died, Marcy Borders wondered whether her cancer was related to Sept. 11". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2015-08-26. She was 28 at the time, and Honda's haunting photo of her — distributed worldwide by Agence France-Presse — became one of the most iconic images of that horrifying day.
  4. ^ Stan Honda (2015-03-25). "Dusk in the Arctic". Agence France-Presse. Retrieved 2015-08-27.
  5. ^ Stan Honda. "Eyewitness: Stan Honda - Reflections of a Photojournalist". Retrieved 2015-08-27.