Taking a Stand in Baton Rouge is a photograph of Ieshia Evans, a nurse from Pennsylvania, being arrested by police officers dressed in riot gear during a protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on 9 July 2016. The protest began in the aftermath of the shooting by police of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile. The image, taken by Jonathan Bachman for Reuters, became a viral phenomenon on social media, described by several media organizations as "iconic", with some comparing the image (and Evans) to the photograph of "Tank Man" in the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989.
Video Taking a Stand in Baton Rouge
Background
At the protest on July 9, 2016, which followed the shooting of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and of Philando Castile in Minnesota by police officers, Ieshia Evans was photographed by Jonathan Bachman for Reuters news agency confronting a line of police in riot gear. The image shows a young woman in a flowing dress standing with her arms crossed facing down a line of heavily armed police while two armored officers rush forward to put her in handcuffs. The photograph became a viral phenomenon on social media.
Evans was attending her first protest when she was arrested, having traveled to Baton Rouge after seeing news coverage of the shooting of Sterling. She was imprisoned, held overnight and released on the evening of the next day.
Maps Taking a Stand in Baton Rouge
Cultural impact
Multiple media organizations described the image as "iconic". The German television channel n-tv described Evans as the "icon" of the protest. Teju Cole, writing for the New York Times Magazine, said that "in spite of, or because of, its simple narrative, Bachman's photograph became an icon. It joined a small group of other images connected to the Black Lives Matter movement", including images of a man throwing a tear gas canister back at police during a protest in Ferguson, Missouri after the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown, Bree Newsome taking down a Confederate flag at the North Carolina State House, and activist DeRay Mckesson being arrested in Baton Rouge, also while protesting Sterling's death.
The photograph drew comparisons to images of previous civil rights demonstrations as well as the image of "Tank Man" taken during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Yoni Appelbaum commented for The Atlantic:
There are images that are impossible to forget, searing themselves into our collective consciousness. One man staring down a column of tanks in Tiananmen Square. A high school student attacked by police dogs in Birmingham, Alabama. This is such a photo.
Evans was interviewed by Gayle King for CBS This Morning, and the public radio program Studio 360 later commissioned Tracy K. Smith to write a poem on the subject of the image. The photograph was included in The New York Times' "The Year in Pictures 2016".
Awards
Bachman's photograph of Evans standing as the two police officers charge towards her was awarded first prize for Contemporary Issues in the 2017 (60th) World Press Photo Contest.
Ieshia Evans
Evans, the subject of the photograph, was 35 at the time it was taken. She is originally from Brooklyn and is a licensed practical nurse in Pennsylvania.
In December 2016, Evans met Bachman for the first time at a symposium on news photography organized by Reuters and the International Center of Photography.
Evans was named AfroAmerica Network Black Woman of the Year for 2016 and was chosen to one of the BBC's 100 Women for that year.
See also
- Black Lives Matter
Notes
References
Further reading
- "Baton Rouge killing: Black Lives Matter protest photo hailed as 'legendary'". BBC News. 11 July 2016.
- Evans, Ieshia (22 July 2016). "I wasn't afraid. I took a stand in Baton Rouge because enough is enough". The Guardian.
- Jenkins, Colleen (11 July 2016). "Nurse in photo describes her arrest in Baton Rouge as 'work of God'". Reuters.
Source of the article : Wikipedia