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Greg Marinovich
Greg Marinovich is co-author of The Bang Bang Club, a nonfiction book on South Africa’s transition to democracy that has been translated into six languages. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer and filmmaker.
He spent 25 years covering conflict around the globe, with his writing and photographs appearing in magazines and newspapers worldwide. His images are to be found in institutional collections from MOMA SF to the Brenthurst foundation to the Constitutional Court, as well as private collectors.
His 2012 award winning investigations into the Marikana massacre of miners by police was called the most important South African journalism post Apartheid, and a book “Murder at Small Koppie” was published early in 2016 and won the Alan Paton non-fiction prize in 2017.
Marinovich was Editor-In-Chief of the Twenty Ten project, tutoring and managing over 100 African journalists’ work in all forms of media. He gives lectures and workshops on human rights, justice photography and storytelling. He was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 2013/14 and currently teaches visual journalism and documentary film-making at Boston University’s College of Communication.
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