Word: subjectã
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...noticed that, alone among the dozen or so other entries, Dean’s photo was a blurry gray shot of his back talking to four or five equally blurry members of the press at a blurry location. All the other photos were well-lit images including their subject??s faces—not a bad objective for responsible photojournalism. Two weeks later—the same week as Newsweek’s “Doubts” story—Time ran a blotchy color-by-numbers-style illustration of Dean. Their analysis, as it turned...
Writing a story, or a newspaper column—to some extent, any creative effort—is a solitary practice, an attempt to take an internal impression and document it. Regardless of the subject??ourselves, our families, strangers, nature—the process of creating turns our focus relentlessly inward: to pinpoint, as precisely as possible, the dimensions of this impression, the color and the shape, so that we can faithfully reproduce it and our creations ring true. The more I thought about it, the more it seemed that all this time I’ve spent...
...It’s not so common in physics to have two experiments running on the same subject??two different experiments with the same setup and the same machine,” Variola says...
...there is something reductive about this view, fundamentally sound though it is. A photographer is always able to convey his or her personal opinion with provocative selection and framing of a snapshot’s subject??far more easily than can the author of a news story. Especially in a case like Keating’s, where the image provided anecdotal color rather than documentary evidence of news, is a photograph ever anything more than “information that is manipulated?" Brent Cunningham, managing editor of the CJR and one of the leaders of an inquiry into...
Previously, the researchers had performed experiments that found that at least six hours of sleep improves a subject??s ability to perform a mental task or retain information...