
Picturing Atrocity
Batchen Gidley
Ever since the landmark publication of Susan Sontag's On Photography, it has been impossible to look at photographs, particularly those of violence and suffering, without questioning our role as photographic voyeur. Are we desensitized by the proliferation of these images? Or do the images stir our own sense of justice and act as a call to arms? Are we consuming the suffering of others? What should our responses to these images be?
To answer these questions, Picturing Atrocity brings together essays from some of the foremost writers on photography today, including Rebecca Solnit, Alfredo Jaar, Ariella Azoulay, John Lucaites, Robert Hariman and Susan Meiselas, to offer close readings of images that reveal the realities behind the photographs, the subjects and the photographers. From the massacre of the Sioux Indians at Wounded Knee to the torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib, from famine in China to apartheid in South Africa, Picturing Atrocity examines a broad spectrum of photographs. Each essay focuses specifically on an iconic image, offering a distinct approach and context, in order to enable us to look again - this time more closely - at the picture. In addition, four photo-essays showcase the work of photographers involved in the making of photographs of brutality as well as the artists’ own reflections on these images.
Together these essays cover the historical and geographical range of atrocity photographs and respond to current concerns about such disturbing images. Picturing Atrocity is an important read, not just for insights into photography, but for its reflections on human injustice and suffering. In keeping with that aim, all royalties from the book will be donated to Amnesty International.
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About Batchen Gidley
Reviews for Picturing Atrocity
CAA Reviews
By closely reading both iconic images and banal photographs of crises within their context, the various contributors show readers how to be critical of what is seen and unseen . . . These vivid, lucid essays make an invaluable contribution to the history of photography and provide a model for active looking and critical engagement. Highly recommended.
Choice
there are some subtle and effective examinations of the space where art and horror meet, and what's notable throughout is the way the text surrounds the terrible images in an almost Lilliputian attempt to restrain their power.
The Australian
The writers offer fresh understandings and analyses of photographys role in documenting atrocity by considering iconic images, as well as photo-essays by groundbreaking artists . . . . This is an important book, which not only reflects on photography, but also on human injustice and suffering.
Art News, New Zealand
The volume brings together some of the most prominent contemporary writers in the field of photography and visual studies . . . Without pretending to be an anthology of contemporary photography theory or establishing a canon of war and conflict imagery, it provides a cartography of the current issues and debates in the field . . . The books undeniable achievement is the deconstruction of the concept as a clear, demarcated event through the variety of approaches and reactions to the visual
Photography and Culture
It is hard to look: My Lai, Dachau, Abu Ghraib, Wounded Knee. We know these atrocities through the painful evidence of unforgettable documentary photographs. But these images are far from innocent. Just as atrocity itself is a loaded term, every photograph of such an event is a bit of high-level propaganda in a moralized political argument, encouraging the viewer to bear witness, make judgments, take sides. This important new collection of essays by some of the most brilliant analysts of photography shows how deliberately horrifying pictures have shaped and continue to shape the ethics and politics of the modern era.
Brian Wallis, Chief Curator, International Center of Photography
Picturing Atrocity is an excellent examination of the dilemmas implicit in photographys representation of human suffering, whether caused by torture, war, poverty, the political chaos and neglect that multiplies the toll from natural disasters (as in Africas Horn region today), or other gross rights violations. Multi-layered and lucid, these essays demolish any lingering pretence that images of suffering can be understood without also considering the context and media in which they are presented, and the often far-from-the-scene viewer who consumes them. Picturing Atrocity is critical reading for communicators in the aid, development and human rights communities who participate in the dissemination of these essential but volatile images.
Ellen Tolmie, Senior Photography Editor, UNICEF