Ed Kashi has spent nearly five decades documenting the pulse of the modern world—its struggles, hopes, and transformations. A pioneering photojournalist and filmmaker, Kashi’s career embodies a deep commitment to storytelling as an act of empathy and responsibility. His latest book,
A Period in Time: Looking Back while Moving Forward: 1977–2022, gathers over two hundred photographs that trace his lifelong pursuit to witness history as it unfolds. More than a visual record, the book offers a reflection on how photography can both reveal and preserve the fragile connections between people and place.
From his earliest assignments in the late 1970s to his long-term projects in the Middle East, Europe, and the Americas, Kashi’s work captures not just events, but the human emotions that define them. His images of the Kurdish struggle, his exploration of identity in the Middle East—rooted in his own Iraqi heritage—and his portraits of aging in America all demonstrate a profound sensitivity to the resilience of the human spirit. Each photograph is an act of witnessing, a meditation on endurance and dignity amid upheaval.
The book also unveils Kashi’s inner world. Through excerpts from personal “dispatches” sent to his wife, Julie Winokur, readers gain access to the solitude, ethical weight, and emotional cost of a life spent on the frontlines of global storytelling. These intimate moments remind us that behind every image lies the experience of the photographer—his doubts, discoveries, and devotion to truth.
Published by the Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin,
A Period in Time stands as both archive and testament. It invites readers to see photography not simply as documentation, but as a living dialogue between past and present—a tool for understanding humanity and, ultimately, ourselves.
Image:
Ed Kashi
Youth gather around a makeshift bonfire in The Fountain, a Loyalist housing estate in a Protestant enclave of Londonderry, Northern Ireland, 1989 © Ed Kashi