The Last Hunters
David Morris & Candy Whittome
The images in the above slideshow are taken from ‘The Last Hunters’, an oral history project conceived by Candy Whittome and David Morris, which focuses on the lives of the crab fishermen of Cromer, Norfolk.
Some of these photographs appear in The Last Hunters, published by Full Circle editions.
David Morris
Born in East Yorkshire David Morris trained in Graphic Design at Hull College of Art. In 2009 he won Professional Photographer of the Year, and in 2010 the Reportage section of Black and White Photographer of the Year. He lives in Cromer, Norfolk.
More about the author →Candy Whittome
Candy Whittome is a work psychologist and a trained barrister. She spent ten years abroad working for not-for-profit organisations as a human rights lawyer and researcher, as well as a stint in the Political Division at the UN in New York. Now doing a PhD at Birkbeck College, London, she also lectures in psychology for the Open University and particularly enjoys teaching prison students. She spends as much time as possible in Cromer.
More about the author →More on Granta.com
Interview
Brea Souders & Alice Zoo
‘How would I feel if I had messaged for years with someone that I later found out was an AI?’
Brea Souders speaks to Alice Zoo about chatbots, interconnection and the dialogue between photography and text in her work.
The Weight of the Earth
Debmalya Ray Choudhuri & John-Baptiste Oduor
‘The presence of another person at the scene is suggested. The image invites you to imagine their position and to mentally assume it.’
Photography by Debmalya Ray Choudhuri, introduced by John-Baptiste Oduor.
Plainsong
Suzie Howell & A. K. Blakemore
‘Postures of graceful receptivity, or surrender. How do we tell the difference?’
A.K. Blakemore introduces Suzie Howell’s photographs.
We’re Not Really Strangers
Sama Beydoun
‘The people I’ve photographed made Beirut liveable.’
Sama Beydoun photographs the nightlife of Beirut.
Pounding a Nail
Studs Terkel
‘It wasn't his first radio interview—he'd done a few in New York the previous year—but certainly among his earliest.’
Granta magazine is run by the Granta Trust (charity number 1184638)
The copyright to all contents of this site is held either by Granta or by the individual authors, and none of the material may be used elsewhere without written permission. For reprint enquiries, contact us.
- Granta
- 12 Addison Avenue
- London W11 4QR
- United Kingdom
- Tel +44(0)20 7605 1360