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B&H Photography Podcast

GI Diary and The Vietnam Slide Project

B&H Photography Podcast

Jill Waterman

Podcast, Photography, Arts, Visual Arts, Bh, Photo

4.62K Ratings

🗓️ 29 March 2018

⏱️ 66 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

March 29 is now the official National Vietnam War Veterans Day, set aside to “observe with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities” the commemoration of the war. More important than commemorating a war is to commemorate the service, in some cases the ultimate service, that soldiers gave their nation. For our part, we commemorate with what we know—photography—and on today’s episode of the B&H Photography Podcast, we talk about photography created by U.S. servicemen during their time in Vietnam.

We begin with David Parks who, in 1968, published a book about his experience in Vietnam, titled GI Diary. The book includes excerpts of the diary he kept and personal photos he took while in the army. Mr. Parks, who is the son of famed photographer Gordon Parks, dropped out of college knowing that he was likely to be drafted. He saw front-line combat and documented his experiences, in text and image, from the viewpoint of an African-American “grunt.” We speak with Mr. Parks about his ability to photograph in such a challenging situation, about the gear he used, how he processed film, if he considered his work photojournalism, and how his diaries came to be one of the first books ever published about the Vietnam War.

On the second half of our program, we welcome Kendra Rennick, of The Vietnam Slide Project. When a friend employed her help to organize a collection of photos taken by her late father, a project was born. That project took on a life, and Ms. Rennick started an archive of “slides” taken only by soldiers who served in Vietnam. Many of these images reflect the more mundane aspects of army life, but are a rare glimpse into the lives and concerns of soldiers, some on their very first trip out of the States. We speak with Ms. Rennick about the organization of her project, its future, and the relationships she has developed with the veterans and families who donate their imagery.

Guests: David Parks and Kendra Rennick

Photograph ©C.R. Foster, courtesy The Vietnam Slide Project

Host: Allan Weitz
Senior Creative Producer: John Harris
Producer: Jason Tables

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're listening to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:04.0

For over 40 years, B&H has been the professional source for photography, video, audio, and

0:08.8

more.

0:09.8

For your favorite gear, news, and reviews, visit us at bnh.com or download the B&H app to

0:15.4

your iPhone or Android device.

0:17.6

Now here's your host, Alan White.

0:21.1

Greetings and welcome to the B&H Photography Podcast.

0:24.7

March 29th is now officially recognized as National Vietnam Veterans Day.

0:29.6

With that in mind, we're hosting a show about the photography of US servicemen and women

0:34.6

who captured their experiences while serving in Vietnam in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

0:41.1

This is not about the photojournalism that is so embedded in our consciousness, but the

0:45.9

images taken by soldiers themselves, some of which depict aspects of combat, but much more

0:51.8

as a blend of the mundane details of army life, photos of friends, and comrades, and even

0:57.3

something close to tourist photos of the land and people of Vietnam.

1:01.2

To join us for this conversation, we are fortunate enough to have Kendra Renek of the Vietnam

1:05.6

Sly Project, of which we will talk about in more detail during the second half of our show.

1:10.8

But first, we're going to be joined by David Parks, who in 1968 authored a book, GI Diary,

1:17.1

chronicling his nine month combat duty in Vietnam, and including not only his written work,

1:22.4

but many accompanying photographs.

1:24.8

Now, his return from Vietnam, his diary, was published by Harper and Row.

1:28.8

It's a nuanced description of war from the grunts perspective, and it does not shy away

1:33.6

at all from issues of race, injustice, and barbaric activities.

...

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