Steel Works. Consett, from Steel to Tortilla Chips £ 50

Published by Why Not Publishing in September 1990, on the 10th anniversary of the closure of Consett steelworks in September 1980 Laminated gatefold cover, 96 pages, 41 colour, 90 b/w photographs 30 X 22.5cm | ISBN 0 9516555 1 5

Photographs by Julian Germain, Tommy Harris, Don McCullin, the People of Consett Introduction by David Lee Essays: The Big Chimney, by J.H. Watson, 1938. Men of Steel, by Hunter Davies, 1974. There’s Work for Them That Wants It, by Martin Herron, 1990 Designed by Why Not Associates

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Steel Works (1986-90) describes the effects of the radical economic changes in and around Consett, in the north of England, as a result of the ruthless Thatcherite politics of the time. The title of Kevin Smith’s 2004 book on that period, Civil War Without Guns, describes the nature of the brutal social confrontation that took place in the UK between 1980 and 1985. What was ground-breaking about Steel Works was the fact that Germain mixed his own work with photographs made by Tommy Harris, a steel worker and part-time photographer who had worked for decades for the local newspaper, and with vernacular photographs from workers’ family albums, and a reportage made by star reporter Don McCullin for the Sunday Times Magazine. Germain thus gave birth to a practice that would later be labelled ‘postmodern visual history writing’. Its essence resides in the fact that no one voice can be authoritative: history is by its nature the product of multiple voices and of recombining records from different moments in time. Or, as Frits Gierstberg recognised in Perspektief No. 41 in 1991: “By juxtaposing different types of photography Germain brings up for discussion their separate claims to authenticity and historical reality within the presentation itself”.

Bas Vroege, curator of Multivocal Histories, Noorderlicht International Photofestival, Groningen, the Netherlands, 2009

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Steel Works Special Edition (Slipcase with 2 prints) £ 325