The book interweaves an autobiographical narrative with concrete research. Mraz describes the resistance he encountered in US academia to this new way of showing and describing the past in films and photographs, as well as some illuminating experiences as a visiting professor at several US universities. More importantly, he reflects on what it has meant to move to Mexico and become a Mexican. Mexico is home to a thriving school of photohistorians perhaps unequaled in the world. Some were trained in art history, and a few continue to pursue that discipline. However, the great majority work from the discipline known as "photohistory" which focuses on vernacular photographs made outside of artistic intentions.
A central premise of the book is that knowing the cultures of the past and of the other is crucial in societies dominated by short-term and parochial thinking, and that today's hyper-audiovisuality requires historians to use modern media to offer their knowledge as alternatives to the "perpetual present" in which we live.
A giant in the field of history in modern media reflects on Mexican photography and his career as its student
"Daring, thought-provoking, and extremely readable. . . . A major contribution in itself, but also of special interest in relation to the importance of Mraz's work to all scholars of Mexican history and visual culture."
--John Lear, author of Picturing the Proletariat: Artists and Labor in Revolutionary Mexico, 1908-1940
"Very few intellectuals have the genius to work beyond their training and create something new. John Mraz is one of them."
--James Krippner, author of Rereading the Conquest: Power, Politics, and the History of Early Colonial Michoac�n, Mexico, 1521-1565 and Paul Strand in Mexico