- Camilo José Vergara
Camilo José Vergara (born
1944 ) is a Chilean-born,New York -based writer, photographer and documentarian. He was born inSantiago, Chile .Vergara has been compared to
Jacob Riis [ [http://rutgerspress.rutgers.edu/acatalog/__How_the_Other_Half_Worships_2335.html Blurbs for Vergara's "How the Other Half Worships"] ] for his photographic documentation of American slums and decaying urban environments. In 2005, he published "How the Other Half Worships", the title of which alludes to Riis's pioneering book "How the Other Half Lives " (1890). Vergara is noted for photographing the same buildings and neighborhoods multiple times over many years to capture changes over time.Vergara won a
MacArthur Foundation "genius grant" in2002 and served as a fellow at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities (MARCH) atRutgers University in 2003/2004. He received the Robert E. Park Award of the American Sociological Association for "The New American Ghetto" in 1997.Vergara's work was the subject of a
1999 exhibit at theNational Building Museum , "El Nuevo Mundo: The Landscape ofLatino Los Angeles ." The exhibit was shown later in 1999 at theCooper-Hewitt ,National Design Museum ,Smithsonian Institution . "The New American Ghetto", an earlier exhibition, opened at theNational Building Museum and was later shown at TheMunicipal Arts Society inNew York City . Since 2004, Vergara's main work has been a website called "Invincible Cities" (invinciblecities.camden.rutgers.edu).In
1995 , Vergara made a controversial proposal that 12 square blocks of downtownDetroit be declared a "skyscraper ruins park," an "Americanacropolis ," for the preservation and study of the deteriorating and empty skyscrapers. "We could transform the nearly 100 troubled buildings into a grand national historic park of play and wonder, an urbanMonument Valley .... Midwestern prairie would be allowed to invade from the north. Trees, vines, and wildflowers would grow on roofs and out of windows; goats and wild animals—squirrels, possum, bats, owls, ravens, snakes and insects—would live in the empty behemoths, adding their calls, hoots and screeches to the smell of rotten leaves and animal droppings." (Metropolis, April 1995).Vergara received a B.A. (1968) in
sociology from theUniversity of Notre Dame and an M.A. (1977) in sociology fromColumbia University , where he also completed the course work for his Ph.D. (not yet awarded). His work has been published in seven books:* 1989, "Silent Cities: The Evolution of the American Cemetery". ISBN 0910413223
* 1995, "New American Ghetto". ISBN 0813522099
* 1999, "American Ruins". ISBN 1580930565
* 2001, "Twin Towers Remembered". ISBN 1568983514
* 2001, "Unexpected Chicagoland". ISBN 1565847016
* 2004, "Subway Memories". ISBN 1580931464
* 2005, "How the Other Half Worships". ISBN 0813536820Notes and references
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