jlw said:
.....So, if you were to say to me that you were interested in photographing "the homeless," I guess my questions would be: Are you involved in the lives of homeless people in general? Are you acquainted with people who work with them? Do you volunteer in a homeless shelter or advocacy group? If you're not interested in homeless people, why are you interested in photographing homeless people in the first place? (And how can your photographs have any insight if you don't know anything about the subjects?)
I feel that thinking of "the homeless" as simply an abstract collection of potential heart-rending photographs doesn't do justice to them as individuals. If you get involved at the individual level, you might be surprised. I belong to a little church that does a lot of community outreach projects, and one thing we've learned from these is that the population of homeless people is as diverse as the general population: they're not all scary, incoherent "winos" and they're not all tragically noble "victims of societal neglect." How can you expect to make good photographs of people if you don't have the vaguest idea of who they are or why they live the way they do?
Actually, I think I was saying that not only are the homeless not just an "absract collection of potential heart-rendering photographs" to me but that they are as much my neighbors as the iPod wearing yuppies and poodle-walking "matrons of a certain age" who also populate my community.
So, if I were to go out on a given day and document my community - would I be right of wrong to include photographs of my homeless neighbors?
Would it be exploitative if I showed one of them collecting beverage bottles and cans are redeemable for five cents each? Aren't I in such an instance simply documenting a working person doing his/her job.
And if instead, I studiously ignored these neighbors, would I not be engaging in a fraudelent depiction of what isn't really my community?
And if I am extremely busy at my work, such that I have little time to devote to personally performing good works, but instead contribute money to support those who have the time that I lack, is my caring of lesser worth?
And lastly, you ask: "How can you expect to make good photographs of people if you don't have the vaguest idea of who they are or why they live the way they do?"
But, as I said several times, and what you choose to ignore, is that I do live amongst the homeless, as much as I live amongst the privileged. I choose to live in a densely populated urban area and my neighborhood ranges from luxury apartment buildings to a men's shelter to a rehab center.
Each day I am surrounded by tourists who like to take pictures of famous places. They do not come to my community to take picture of the homeless who live in my community. Quite the contrary, they avert their eyes from such persons. With the rare exception, I would hazard to say that the only people who "shoot the homeless" are the people who care about them!