Understanding Photobook – Raised By Wolves Jim Goldberg

Related image
USA. San Francisco and Hollywood. 1986-92. Polaroid Grid.

The book is quite large, at around A3 size it is bigger than most photo-books I have seen. In hand the book is heavy and looks as if it is packed full of high quality images on thick paper. It is smooth and glossy on the outside and feels not much different to any other new-ish book. It contains a mixture of mostly black and white images and some coloured ones, accompanied also by notes and writings on each image written by the subject of the photo themselves. The paper texture remains the same throughout: slightly glossy. RBW is a mix of full bleed landscape images covering two pages as well as portrait. It is a soft back book that can be bent easily, there is no cloth cover or intricate binding.

The title is probably what attracted me most to the book; ‘Raised By Wolves’ is a term which was coined by one of the subjects who was being photographed, he wrote it down on a note and Goldberg has displayed it next to his portrait in the book. I interpret the meaning of this title as coming from how most of the young subjects in this book have been abused physically/sexually etc, by their own parents and have been brought up around constant drug abuse. Therefore they couldn’t escape from this way of life and ended up living on the streets and mostly following in their parent’s footsteps- the young runaways had been set up to fail since birth.


USA. Hollywood, California. 1989. “Dave at McDonald’s.”

The focus narrative in RBW is the story of Tweeky Dave and Echo. The pair share an appetite for heroin but not much else. He moons after her, proposing marriage and children, fueled by impossible, sweet bravado as he walks, half-starved, down Hollywood Boulevard with his bedroll. She recognizes him as worse than a bad risk and dumps him to run with other boys, who abuse her. She becomes pregnant, has her baby, then returns, broke, to her mother’s home. This is all portrayed through numerous written interviews with the two, as well as other characters, and through constant photos and notes that they have written.

Jim Goldberg USA. San Francisco, California. 1991. “Echo, 4 Days Before the Baby was Born.”

“I didn’t really fit in to my family as much as they wanted me to and I think that lead me eventually to photography. A camera back then, and probably still now, was like having a calling card that let you into places that you normally wouldn’t go to, or to people you normally wouldn’t talk to. I moved to San Francisco at the end of 1976 and probably soon thereafter I started going out on the street. Some of the people that I met were living in transient hotels, and they invited me into their homes and I photographed them.That was interesting to me. I was dealing with a group of people who I had very little contact with; they were poor, they were hidden, they were invisible people in these grimy rooms.”

Jim Goldberg spent 10 years photographing, audio-taping and videotaping to prepare this book. The book pairs images of the adolescents in their makeshift environments with extensive interviews. Their stories are accompanied by testimony from social workers, doctors, parents and police. The truth about a runaway’s childhood is sometimes hard to determine. These kids seem acutely aware of what adults want to hear. Some may not separate the rights of parents to exercise authority from fantasies of child abuse. But the blase accounts they gave Goldberg of violence at home and of streets rife with prostitution, AIDS and hard drugs are too numerous to be discounted.

“I had the idea of having people write their stories on the photographs and, although I didn’t really know what I was doing, that turned out to be something really integral to my practice for 40 years. I just saw something that I felt I needed to try and make sense of. And using text enabled me to do that.”

There is a definite link between the images and text in the book. As each image more often than not came alongside a note or physical writing on top of the photo, in the subject’s handwriting. Goldberg has since been using this process for many years as it allows a more open discussion between the subject and how they are being portrayed through the photograph, in their own words.

Bibliography: https://www.huckmag.com/art-and-culture/photography-2/flipping-gaze-photos-jim-goldberg-documentary-storyteller/ , New York Times.

Leave a Reply