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Photo Book

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By Dominic Sandbrook

Publisher: HENI Publishing
Publication date: December 2025
Print length: 552 pages
Language: English
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Photographing a Modern World: Britain 1900–75, published in hardcover in December 2025, offers an expansive visual account of a nation in the midst of profound transformation. Spanning three quarters of a century, the book brings together nearly 500 news photographs that chart Britain’s passage into modernity, from the age of steam and industry to the cultural shifts of the postwar years. Drawn from the Daily Mail’s historical archive, these images form a vivid record of daily life shaped by innovation, conflict, resilience, and change.

Arranged thematically, the photographs trace how work, housing, leisure, and public life evolved across generations. Early images of machinery and industrial labor sit alongside scenes of suburban expansion, mass entertainment, and emerging youth cultures. Moments of collective trauma and resolve—most notably during World War II—are captured with striking immediacy, revealing how ordinary citizens endured and adapted during extraordinary times. Other chapters reflect optimism and curiosity, from technological breakthroughs to Britain’s fascination with science, aviation, and the Space Race.

The book highlights the role of pioneering press photographers who shaped the visual language of modern journalism. Figures such as Frank Rust and Herbert Mason brought clarity and drama to unfolding events, balancing factual documentation with a strong sense of composition and timing. Their images demonstrate how photography became central to the way news was experienced, offering both information and emotional connection. Each photograph is accompanied by a concise caption, grounding the image in its historical moment while inviting closer reflection.

Opening with an essay by social historian Dominic Sandbrook, Photographing a Modern World: Britain 1900–75 situates these images within a broader narrative of social change. More than a collection of photographs, the book functions as a collective memory, showing how modern Britain was built not only through landmark events, but through the accumulated texture of everyday life. It affirms the enduring power of news photography to define an era and preserve its complexities for future generations.

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