The Great Depression in the United States led many people to live on the streets and to leave their homes to seek work wherever it existed. Dorothea Lange was very sensitive to this issue and used her photographs as a method of complaint. She began to portray beggars in the streets, unemployed, etc. She was soon hired by the state and started working for the Farm Security Administration. The FSA …show more content…
Between 1942 and 1945 he began to document the Japanese community forced to live in internment camps in California. In the mid- 40s Lange, who had been hired to record the Japanese - Americans in the concentration camps, was censured by the Relocation Authority War, because she was showing the internment camps for Japanese-Americans in a way the government did not agree.
Dorothea Lange became world famous with her series of photographs entitled "Migrant Mother". These images were taken in California in 1936. They showed Florence Owens Thompson and her three children. These sets of portraits clearly define the personality of the work of Lange. She took the pictures of close, clear, concise and forms a very tender way. They reflect the situation that people were going through, but without them losing a bit of a