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Doris Derby civil rights photographer picked up her camera in Mississippi in the 1960s — when witnessing what was happening to Black people was dangerous, and documenting it was even more so. As an activist and SNCC field secretary, Derby understood something essential: whoever controls the image controls the memory. She wasn't willing to let someone else decide how Black people would be remembered.
This episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast centers Derby's courage and conviction. She showed up with her camera even when it wasn't safe, even when the work wasn't celebrated, and even when her photographs sat in boxes for decades before the world caught up to them. Her story is an invitation to think about documentation as an act of love and resistance.
Key Takeaways
Doris Derby's work as a SNCC field secretary and civil rights photographer was rooted in a clear belief: the image could become evidence, memory, and testimony, and that responsibility was hers to carry.
For far too long, someone else controlled the narrative of Black life — deciding which angle mattered, which expression would be printed, and which story would be told. Derby's decision to pick up the camera was a direct act of reclaiming that power.
Photography, in Derby's hands, was never just about aesthetics. It was about creating a visual archive that didn't erase, didn't soften, and didn't skew the perspective of Black people living through the civil rights movement.
The question this episode leaves us with is one worth carrying: when you look at a photograph, who is holding the camera, and what are they asking you to see?
In This Episode
[00:00] Welcome and show introduction
[00:28] Episode quote from Doris Derby
[00:44] Who was Doris Derby — activist, photographer, SNCC field secretary
[01:10] The camera as evidence, memory, and testimony
[01:37] Reflection: what it means to stand behind the lens
[02:05] Who controlled the narrative before we picked up the camera
[02:37] Documentation as an act of love and resistance
[03:09] The question we assume someone else is answering
[03:55] Photography as visual archive — what gets to be seen
[04:28] The closing question you can carry with you
[04:40] Outro and closing encouragement
📱 CONNECT:
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays
Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/
Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/
By Alicia ThomasDoris Derby civil rights photographer picked up her camera in Mississippi in the 1960s — when witnessing what was happening to Black people was dangerous, and documenting it was even more so. As an activist and SNCC field secretary, Derby understood something essential: whoever controls the image controls the memory. She wasn't willing to let someone else decide how Black people would be remembered.
This episode of the Knowledge Gumbo Podcast centers Derby's courage and conviction. She showed up with her camera even when it wasn't safe, even when the work wasn't celebrated, and even when her photographs sat in boxes for decades before the world caught up to them. Her story is an invitation to think about documentation as an act of love and resistance.
Key Takeaways
Doris Derby's work as a SNCC field secretary and civil rights photographer was rooted in a clear belief: the image could become evidence, memory, and testimony, and that responsibility was hers to carry.
For far too long, someone else controlled the narrative of Black life — deciding which angle mattered, which expression would be printed, and which story would be told. Derby's decision to pick up the camera was a direct act of reclaiming that power.
Photography, in Derby's hands, was never just about aesthetics. It was about creating a visual archive that didn't erase, didn't soften, and didn't skew the perspective of Black people living through the civil rights movement.
The question this episode leaves us with is one worth carrying: when you look at a photograph, who is holding the camera, and what are they asking you to see?
In This Episode
[00:00] Welcome and show introduction
[00:28] Episode quote from Doris Derby
[00:44] Who was Doris Derby — activist, photographer, SNCC field secretary
[01:10] The camera as evidence, memory, and testimony
[01:37] Reflection: what it means to stand behind the lens
[02:05] Who controlled the narrative before we picked up the camera
[02:37] Documentation as an act of love and resistance
[03:09] The question we assume someone else is answering
[03:55] Photography as visual archive — what gets to be seen
[04:28] The closing question you can carry with you
[04:40] Outro and closing encouragement
📱 CONNECT:
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@aliciatsays
Newsletter: https://tremendous-painter-642.kit.com/305737ceb5
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aliciatsays/
Merch: https://aliciatsays.shop/