Item Detail
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13683
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4
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15
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English
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Dorothea Lange's Portrait of Utah's Great Depression
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Winter 2002
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70
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39-62
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In 1936, Dorothea Lange visited Utah to photographically document the Depression for the Farm Security Administration. She took photographs in the mining town of Consumers and in Escalante and Widtsoe. She was adept at capturing the Mormon landscape.
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In a Rugged Land : Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange and the Three Mormon Towns Collaboration, 1953-1954
Passing Through : Arthur Rothstein's Photographic Account of Utah, March 1940
The Old Toponymy and the New Topography of Zion: Utah, Photography, and Daniel George's Series God to Go West.
UTAH : 800 : Christine Armbruster's Photo-Essay and the Continuing Documentation of Small-Town Utah -
'Advised Them to Call the Place Escalante'
A History of Garfield County
Carbon County : Eastern Utah's Industrialized Island
In the Direction of His Dreams : Memoirs
Mormon Country
Telling the Tales and Telling the Truth : Writing the History of Widtsoe
The Economics of Ambivalence : Utah's Depression Experience
The Mormon Landscape : Existence, Creation, and Perception of a Unique Image in the American West
The Mormon Village : A Pattern and Technique of Land Settlement
The Next Time We Strike : Labor in Utah's Coal Fields, 1900-1933
The Savage View : Charles Savage, Pioneer Mormon Photographer
Utah : A Guide to the State
Utah's Heritage
Utah's History
Utah : The Right Place. The Official Centennial History