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War Culture and the Contest of Images analyzes the relationships
among contemporary war, documentary practices, and democratic
ideals. Dora Apel examines a wide variety of images and cultural
representations of war in the United States and the Middle East,
including photography, performance art, video games, reenactment,
and social media images. Simultaneously, she explores the merging
of photojournalism and artistic practices, the effects of visual
framing, and the construction of both sanctioned and
counter-hegemonic narratives in a global contest of images. As a
result of the global visual culture in which anyone may produce as
well as consume public imagery, the wide variety of visual and
documentary practices present realities that would otherwise be
invisible or officially off-limits. In our digital era, the
prohibition and control of images has become nearly impossible to
maintain. Using carefully chosen case studies—such as Krzysztof
Wodiczko’s video projections and public works in response to 9/11
and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the performance works of Coco
Fusco and Regina Galindo, and the practices of Israeli and
Palestinian artists—Apel posits that contemporary war images
serve as mediating agents in social relations and as a source of
protection or refuge for those robbed of formal or state-sanctioned
citizenship. While never suggesting that documentary practices are
objective translations of reality, Apel shows that they are
powerful polemical tools both for legitimizing war and for making
its devastating effects visible. In modern warfare and in the
accompanying culture of war that capitalism produces as a permanent
feature of modern society, she asserts that the contest of images
is as critical as the war on the ground.
"A lucid, smart, engaging, and accessible introduction to the
impact of lynching photography on the history of race and violence
in America. "--Grace Elizabeth Hale, author of "Making Whiteness:
The Culture of Segregation in America, 1890-1940"
"With admirable courage, Dora Apel and Shawn Michelle Smith examine
lynching photographs that are horrifying, shameful, and elusive;
with admirable sensitivity they help us delve into the meaning and
legacy of these difficult images. They show us how the images
change when viewed from different perspectives, they reveal how the
photographs have continued to affect popular culture and political
debates, and they delineate how the pictures produce a dialectic of
shame and atonement."--Ashraf H. A. Rushdy, author of "Neo-Slave
Narratives and Remembering Generations"
"This thoughtful and engaging book offers a highly accessible yet
theoretically sophisticated discussion of a painful, complicated,
and unavoidable subject. Apel and Smith, employing complementary
(and sometimes overlapping) methodological approaches to reading
these images, impress upon us how inextricable photography and
lynching are, and how we cannot comprehend lynching without making
sense of its photographic representations."--Leigh Raiford,
co-editor of "The Civil Rights Movement in American Memory"
"Our newspapers have recently been filled with photographs of
mutilated, tortured bodies from both war fronts and domestic
arenas. How do we understand such photographs? Why do people take
them? Why do we look at them? The two essays by Apel and Smith
address photographs of lynching, but their analysis can be applied
to a broader spectrum of images presenting ritual orspectacle
killings."--Frances Pohl, author of "Framing America: A Social
History of American Art"
Outside of the classroom and scholarly publications, lynching has
long been a taboo subject. Nice people, it is felt, do not talk
about it, and they certainly do not look at images representing the
atrocity. In Imagery of Lynching, Dora Apel contests this adopted
stance of ignorance. Through a careful and compelling analysis of
over one hundred representations of lynching, she shows how the
visual documentation of such crimes can be a central vehicle for
the construction and reinforcement of racial hierarchies. She
examines how lynching was often orchestrated explicitly for the
camera, how these images circulated on postcards, but also how they
eventually were appropriated by antilynching forces and artists
from the 1930s to the present. She further investigates the role
that gender played in these visual representations, how photographs
were used to construct ideologies of "whiteness" and "blackness,"
and how interracial desire became part of the imagery. Offering the
fullest and most systematic discussion of the depiction of lynching
in diverse visual forms, this book addresses questions about race,
class, gender, and dissent in the shaping of American society.
Although we may want to avert our gaze, Apel holds it with her
sophisticated interpretations of traumatic images and the uses to
which they have been put.
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