The presence or absence of photographs in museums of dead and injured civilians, victims of aerial bombing by both Allies and the Axis powers during the Second World War, reflect both historical conventions and current political concerns, telling us as much about national identity today as they do about events in this period. Drawing on case studies in Germany, England and Scotland, this paper will consider how and why images of death (and indeed the incidents that brought them about in some cases), are excised from some museums but foregrounded in others. In so doing it will consider such photographs within the context of the overarching display techniques of individual museums, in particular the text that accompanies them, and set these a...
Death in war matters. It matters to the individual, threatened with their own death, or the death of...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
The presence or absence of photographs in museums of dead and injured civilians, victims of aerial b...
Entering the territories of the Third Reich, the Allied 'liberators' were facing incredible deathsca...
Museums and Photography adopts a strong theoretical approach in an in-depth investigation of the dis...
Most recent theories view both museums and photography as socio-cultural constructions that are high...
This thesis examines how artists working for the War Artists’ Advisory Committee (WAAC) represented ...
This article examines the relationship between the photographically-illustrated press and the govern...
At stake in the aerial pictures of Auschwitz was not visual evidence but ethical evidence, a call to...
The chapter discusses the relationship between history, memory and image in the perspective of visua...
In her work The Body in Pain Elaine Scarry discusses what she has termed ‘the referential instabilit...
This article examines the various roles played by photographers and photographic images in the grass...
The debate over the absence or presence of death in public discourse has dominated death studies for...
This article examines if and how memorial museums exhibit graphic atrocity photographs, including pi...
Death in war matters. It matters to the individual, threatened with their own death, or the death of...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...
The presence or absence of photographs in museums of dead and injured civilians, victims of aerial b...
Entering the territories of the Third Reich, the Allied 'liberators' were facing incredible deathsca...
Museums and Photography adopts a strong theoretical approach in an in-depth investigation of the dis...
Most recent theories view both museums and photography as socio-cultural constructions that are high...
This thesis examines how artists working for the War Artists’ Advisory Committee (WAAC) represented ...
This article examines the relationship between the photographically-illustrated press and the govern...
At stake in the aerial pictures of Auschwitz was not visual evidence but ethical evidence, a call to...
The chapter discusses the relationship between history, memory and image in the perspective of visua...
In her work The Body in Pain Elaine Scarry discusses what she has termed ‘the referential instabilit...
This article examines the various roles played by photographers and photographic images in the grass...
The debate over the absence or presence of death in public discourse has dominated death studies for...
This article examines if and how memorial museums exhibit graphic atrocity photographs, including pi...
Death in war matters. It matters to the individual, threatened with their own death, or the death of...
Examining a spectrum of post-mortem images, this volume considers what death photography communicate...
During the First World War nearly three-quarters of a million British subjects were killed. The grie...