Irwin Klein and the New Settlers

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Irwin Klein and the New Settlers

Photographs of Counterculture in New Mexico

Edited by Benjamin Klein
With essays by David Farber, Tom Fels, Tim Hodgdon, Benjamin Klein, and Lois Rudnick
Foreword by Daniel Kosharek
Introduction by Michael William Doyle

192 pages
80 photographs, 12 figures

Hardcover

June 2016

978-0-8032-8510-1

$29.95 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

June 2016

978-0-8032-8587-3

$29.95 Add to Cart

About the Book

Dropouts, renegades, utopians. Children of the urban middle class and old beatniks living alone, as couples, in families, or as groups in the small Nuevomexicano towns. When photographer Irwin Klein began visiting northern New Mexico in the mid-1960s, he found these self-proclaimed New Settlers—and many others—in the back country between Santa Fe and Taos. His black-and-white photographs captured the life of the counterculture’s transition to a social movement. His documentation of these counterculture communities has become well known and sought after for both its sheer beauty and as a primary source about a largely undocumented group.


By blending Klein’s unpublished work with essays by modern scholars, Benjamin Klein (Irwin’s nephew) creates an important contribution to the literature of the counterculture and especially the 1960s. Supporting essays emphasize the importance of a visual record for interpreting this lifestyle in the American Southwest. Irwin Klein and the New Settlers reinforces the photographer’s reputation as an astute observer of back-to-the-land, modern-day Emersonians whose communes represented contemporary Waldens.


Author Bio

The work of Irwin Klein (1933–74) is archived in the permanent collections of the George Eastman House, the Museum of Modern Art, the New York Public Library, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Palace of the Governors Photo Archives in Santa Fe. Benjamin Klein, Irwin’s nephew, teaches European and world history at California State University, East Bay. His articles on the counterculture have appeared in the New Mexico Historical Review and Casa Vogue

Praise

"The 80 photos published in Irwin Klein and the New Settlers: Photographs of Counterculture in New Mexico offer a stunning glimpse into an American subculture."—Paul Weideman, Pasatiempo

"A must read."—Rio Grande Sun

"Klein's photographs embrace how critical not only time and place but also community are to shaping cultural identity."—The Magazine

"For anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the idealism, hardships, and spirited nonconformity of the hippie tribe, Irwin Klein and the New Settlers: Photographs of Counterculture in New Mexico is a must-read—must view, really."—Charles C. Poling & Cindra Kline, New Mexico Magazine

"Irwin Klein and the New Settlers, offers gritty insight into a harsher landscape of bohemian lifestyle."—Christina Waters, Good Times

"Irwin Klein and the New Settlers contributes meaningfully to our understanding of how the counterculture movement played out in New Mexico, its successes and failures, and the people who formed it."—David Pike, H-New Mexico

"Irwin Klein and the New Settlers is a fascinating look into the counterculture of northern New Mexico in the late 1960s and early 1970s. . . . The volume should find a welcome place on both bookshelf and coffee table."—Thomas B. Weyant, H-1960s

"An important visual contribution to the growing body of counterculture scholarship."—Christopher A. Huff, Agricultural History

"Irwin Klein and the New Settlers provides the reader with sensitively taken and beautifully printed images taken with Klein’s practiced and capable eye."—Communal Societies

“This is an evocative photo essay of the early counterculture in New Mexico. Excellent images that are enlightening.”—John Nichols, author of The Milagro Beanfield War and If Mountains Die: A New Mexico Memoir  
 

Table of Contents

List of Photographs
Foreword
Daniel Kosharek
Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
Michael William Doyle
From Innocence to Experience: Irwin B. Klein and the New Settlers of Northern New Mexico
Benjamin Klein and Tim Hodgdon
The Great Hippie Invasion
Lois Rudnick
El Rito and the Power of Place in Sixties America
David Farber and Benjamin Klein
The New Settlers of New Mexico Photographs, 1967–1971
1. The Valley—Settlement
2. Independence Day Celebration—The Hog Farm
3. The Village Settlement
4. Five Star Commune
5. Light & Dark
6. The Hills
7. The Farm
8. Visits
9. Wedding Celebration New Buffalo Commune
Afterword
Tom Fels
Notes
Contributors

Awards

2016 Southwest Book Award from the Border Regional Library Association

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