This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical challenges integral to the visual documentation of war, and the means by which her photography achieves what Susan Sontag terms an "ethics of seeing" (On Photography). In often eschewing, or figuring in unconventional ways, the horrors of war and directing the viewer’s attention to typically unprivileged scenes and moments, I argue that the moral tone and sensibility of Miller’s war photography is a function of her complex engagement with ideas, and the subject matter of, the ordinary and everyday. The essay focuses on two bodies of work: Miller’s photographs of London during the Blitz which were published in Britain and America in 1941 in the b...
The objective of this thesis is to re-contextualise Lee Miller's war correspondence (1944-1945) with...
For centuries pictures of the dead and wounded have been part and parcel of war communications. Ofte...
In the winter of 1927, Lee Miller, 20 years old, was crossing a street in Manhattan, when she was al...
This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical cha...
World War II intensified three overlapping visual experiences for women: seen (those who were the ne...
Susan Sontag, like the Italian writer Umberto Eco, is among the few present day cultural critics who...
This article examines the changing ethics of war photojournalism. It provides a review of the major ...
Fashion model, surrealist artist, muse, photographer, and war correspondent. This discourse of simpl...
There are countless books on war photography, but most focus on dramatic images made by photojournal...
War photographs speak of war through stories. Stories of people they depict, usually during the most...
Photographs speak to us silently across cultures and spaces and we see ourselves as reflected in the...
This thesis examines Lee Miller's role as Vogue's war correspondent during World War II (1939-1945)....
Combining case studies with theoretical and philosophical insights, this book explores the role of p...
This article looks at the role of photography and the processing of violence post 9/11 by examining ...
In one of her meditations on the photographs of war in her 2002 article for The New Yorker, ‘Looking...
The objective of this thesis is to re-contextualise Lee Miller's war correspondence (1944-1945) with...
For centuries pictures of the dead and wounded have been part and parcel of war communications. Ofte...
In the winter of 1927, Lee Miller, 20 years old, was crossing a street in Manhattan, when she was al...
This essay examines the war photography of Lee Miller in terms of the ways it negotiates ethical cha...
World War II intensified three overlapping visual experiences for women: seen (those who were the ne...
Susan Sontag, like the Italian writer Umberto Eco, is among the few present day cultural critics who...
This article examines the changing ethics of war photojournalism. It provides a review of the major ...
Fashion model, surrealist artist, muse, photographer, and war correspondent. This discourse of simpl...
There are countless books on war photography, but most focus on dramatic images made by photojournal...
War photographs speak of war through stories. Stories of people they depict, usually during the most...
Photographs speak to us silently across cultures and spaces and we see ourselves as reflected in the...
This thesis examines Lee Miller's role as Vogue's war correspondent during World War II (1939-1945)....
Combining case studies with theoretical and philosophical insights, this book explores the role of p...
This article looks at the role of photography and the processing of violence post 9/11 by examining ...
In one of her meditations on the photographs of war in her 2002 article for The New Yorker, ‘Looking...
The objective of this thesis is to re-contextualise Lee Miller's war correspondence (1944-1945) with...
For centuries pictures of the dead and wounded have been part and parcel of war communications. Ofte...
In the winter of 1927, Lee Miller, 20 years old, was crossing a street in Manhattan, when she was al...