The article discusses the U.S. sociologist and photographer Lewis Wickes Hine, and his use of photography to expose the evils of child labor in the twentieth century. Topics include the use of art as a tool for social reform by U.S. artists, writers, and journalists in the twentieth century, the educational deficiencies and health and safety hazards of child labor, and Hine's work as the photographer for the National Child Labor Committee.
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