A ground-breaking comparative treatment of cinematic images of atrocity, combining critical perspectives on contemporary film and human rights. A few days after 9/11, US Vice-President Dick Cheney invoked the need for the USA to work 'the dark side' in its global 'War on Terror'. Cinema of the Dark Side explores how contemporary cinema treats state-sponsored atrocity, evoking multiple landscapes of state terror. Investigating the ethical potential of cinematic atrocity images, this book argues that while films help to create and confirm normative perceptions about atrocities, they can also disrupt those perceptions and build alternatives. Asserting a crucial distinction between morality and ethics, a new conceptualisation of human rights ci...
The organization \u27Genocide Watch\u27 estimates that 100 million civilians around the globe have l...
The documentary The Act of Killing adopts a novel experimental approach to mass atrocity. Perpetrato...
First paragraph: The enemy must fear us. When this is over, there will be much more fear in th...
Cinema and society interact. This given becomes fascinating when socio-politically sensitive issues ...
In cinema, the positioning of the mass audience, or at least a large sector of it, has been transfor...
Group show, curated by Paul Lowe. Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potent...
This paper explores the ethical challenges involved in the ways public representation structures our...
Joshua Oppenheimer's documentary 'The Act of Killing' adopts a novel experimental approach to addres...
Abstract This chapter aims to offer a perspective for the structure of moral economy in the neoliber...
Since 2003 when the Sudanese government unleashed its militia known as the janjaweed on the civilian...
Documentary film has ubiquitous presence in our culture. The mechanics of its production are often ...
Over the past twenty years, the phenomenon of Human Rights Cinema has emerged as an important way to...
By taking 9/11 as a starting point, this thesis examines the spectatorship of invisible atrocity ima...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2010. Major: Communication Studies. Advisor: R...
This essay discusses the dissemination of atrocity images in contemporary mass media, from the photo...
The organization \u27Genocide Watch\u27 estimates that 100 million civilians around the globe have l...
The documentary The Act of Killing adopts a novel experimental approach to mass atrocity. Perpetrato...
First paragraph: The enemy must fear us. When this is over, there will be much more fear in th...
Cinema and society interact. This given becomes fascinating when socio-politically sensitive issues ...
In cinema, the positioning of the mass audience, or at least a large sector of it, has been transfor...
Group show, curated by Paul Lowe. Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potent...
This paper explores the ethical challenges involved in the ways public representation structures our...
Joshua Oppenheimer's documentary 'The Act of Killing' adopts a novel experimental approach to addres...
Abstract This chapter aims to offer a perspective for the structure of moral economy in the neoliber...
Since 2003 when the Sudanese government unleashed its militia known as the janjaweed on the civilian...
Documentary film has ubiquitous presence in our culture. The mechanics of its production are often ...
Over the past twenty years, the phenomenon of Human Rights Cinema has emerged as an important way to...
By taking 9/11 as a starting point, this thesis examines the spectatorship of invisible atrocity ima...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. September 2010. Major: Communication Studies. Advisor: R...
This essay discusses the dissemination of atrocity images in contemporary mass media, from the photo...
The organization \u27Genocide Watch\u27 estimates that 100 million civilians around the globe have l...
The documentary The Act of Killing adopts a novel experimental approach to mass atrocity. Perpetrato...
First paragraph: The enemy must fear us. When this is over, there will be much more fear in th...