Helfgott, Isadora A.2024-02-082024-02-082010-01-0110.15786/13677658https://wyoscholar.uwyo.edu/handle/internal/1661https://doi.org/10.15786/13677658Life magazine debuted onto the American publishing scene in November, 1936. The third major publication to come out of Henry Luce's publishing empire, Time, Inc., Life was a picture magazine. It helped to transform visual culture in America, elevating images over text as a means of communication and developing an influential new style of photographic journalism first introduced in the magazine's inaugural issue with Margaret Bourke-White's photographs of the Fort Peck Dam. Ranging in subjects from international politics to society news, Life provided a visual survey of modern experience for its readers, a weekly synopsis of the state of the world presented through pictures elucidated with bold headlines and short captions.enghttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Arts and HumanitiesArt in Life: Fashioning Political Ideology Through Visual Culture in Mid-Century Americajournal contribution