PEACETIME LEBANON 1960s

In early 1960, Stafford’s husband’s work as a foreign correspondent took them to Lebanon, which, at the time, was experiencing a period of peace. A Lebanese publisher invited her to make a book of photographs, which would be used to publicise the country. She travelled extensively over a year, journeying to remote mountain villages while also recording scenes of everyday life in the cities of Beirut, Tripoli and Sidon. Lebanon had an intricate blend of East and West; tradition and modernity. In the 1960s she witnessed some women leading traditional lives, under the gaze or guardianship of men. But she also met and photographed women who were liberated in outlook, studying at the University of Beirut or confidently forging their own paths and careers. Unfortunately, the publisher did not approve of her photographs, because they did not show Lebanon in a Western enough light. She thought she had captured a raw and authentic Lebanon, and evidently that was the issue. The photographs were eventually published in 1988 by Saqi Books, entitled Silent Stories: A Photographic Journey through Lebanon in the Sixties.

In early 1960, Stafford’s husband’s work as a foreign correspondent took them to Lebanon, which, at the time, was experiencing a period of peace. A Lebanese publisher invited her to make a book of photographs, which would be used to publicise the country. She travelled extensively over a year, journeying to remote mountain villages while also recording scenes of everyday life in the cities of Beirut, Tripoli and Sidon. Lebanon had an intricate blend of East and West; tradition and modernity. In the 1960s she witnessed some women leading traditional lives, under the gaze or guardianship of men. But she also met and photographed women who were liberated in outlook, studying at the University of Beirut or confidently forging their own paths and careers. Unfortunately, the publisher did not approve of her photographs, because they did not show Lebanon in a Western enough light. She thought she had captured a raw and authentic Lebanon, and evidently that was the issue. The photographs were eventually published in 1988 by Saqi Books, entitled Silent Stories: A Photographic Journey through Lebanon in the Sixties.