In October, when we were down in Bristol for the Foundation’s BOP event, Martin, Caroline and I got together to select the edit for this new 2026 edition of Small World.
It had become almost a tradition that with every reprint of the book we would change the cover and add in a number of new photos that Martin had rediscovered or taken recently. Over the years, Martin and I made six different editions of the book – each subtly different and each with a new cover. For this edition we added in eight new images, five taken in 2025 and three earlier images. Back in Stockport over the following weeks I adjusted the sequence to accommodate these new images, sent it over to Martin for his approval and then sent it off to EBS, our printers in Italy.
Sadly, Martin never got to see the final book as the finished copies only arrived into the UK just over a week after his death on December 6th.
Dewi Lewis Publishing

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos
First published in 1996, Small World stands as one of the most enduring and influential achievements in
Martin Parr’s career and in the history of contemporary photography. Remaining continuously in print for almost three decades, the book has become a landmark not only because of its popularity, but because of the clarity with which it defines Parr’s singular photographic vision: sharp, humorous, unsettling, and profoundly observant. This revised and extended edition, featuring more than 80 photographs and many of Parr’s most iconic images, reinforces the book’s status as a cornerstone of late-20th and early-21st century documentary practice.
At its heart, Small World is a brilliantly constructed satire of global tourism. Parr turns his lens on travelers across continents, revealing how the pursuit of “authentic” cultural experiences paradoxically produces a flattened, homogenised global culture. His photographs expose the absurdities of leisure, spectacle, and consumption with a visual language that is instantly recognisable: saturated colour, dense detail, and perfectly timed moments of human contradiction. What makes Parr’s work historically significant is not only its wit, but its precision—his ability to distil complex social realities into images that are accessible, memorable, and deeply critical.

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos
Seen today, the book feels not dated but prophetic. Long before terms such as carbon footprint, overtourism, and climate crisis entered common usage, Parr was already mapping the visual consequences of mass travel and global consumerism. The crowds, the queues, the souvenirs, and the staged encounters that populate Small World now read as early evidence of a system pushed to its limits. Nearly thirty years on, the questions Parr raises—about freedom, privilege, mobility, and responsibility—are more urgent than ever.
Crucially, Parr’s tourists are never reduced to caricature alone. They are at once willing participants in a global consumer culture and bemused victims of forces far larger than themselves. In their craving for spectacle, they become symbols of Western prosperity and its contradictions: the assumed right to travel, to choose, and to consume. Parr’s great achievement lies in his refusal to moralise overtly; instead, he invites viewers to recognise themselves within these scenes, implicating us in the systems he so deftly observed.

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos
The importance of this edition is further deepened by the fact that it has been published in the immediate aftermath of Martin Parr’s death. It now stands as one of the final projects shaped with his direct involvement, lending the book the weight of a concluding statement. Parr was not only a member of the prestigious Magnum Photos agency, but one of the most influential photographers of his generation—someone who permanently altered how documentary photography could look, feel, and speak about the world.
As such, this revised and extended Small World is more than a reissue of a classic. It is a tribute to a photographer whose work defined an era and continues to resonate powerfully today. For collectors, historians, photographers, and anyone seeking to understand how photography can critically and humanely reflect contemporary life, this book is not simply desirable—it is essential.

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos

From ‘Small World’ © Martin Parr / Magnum Photos