This essay discusses the dissemination of atrocity images in contemporary mass media, from the photographs of mass-graves in the Nazi concentration camps to the pictures of torture of Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib. The central question is one of distances: the distance between the image and the event, between the picture and the beholder, and between the destroyed human body and the cultural forms through which it is represented. These distances, their upholding and overcoming, are analyzed through the works of three visual artists that have dealt with atrocity imagery in their art: in 1945, an Italian artist encountering the Nazi camps in 1945; a Holocaust survivor merging mass-grave photographs with pornography in the 1960s; and in 2002, ...
Historical and contemporary cases of collective violence show an incremental use of photography and ...
Picturing Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia examines the role which atrocity photographs ...
Group show, curated by Paul Lowe. Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potent...
By taking 9/11 as a starting point, this thesis examines the spectatorship of invisible atrocity ima...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
In the wake of a resurgence of Holocaust scholarship in North America in the 1980s, a growing intere...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
In the wake of a resurgence of Holocaust scholarship in North America in the 1980s, a growing intere...
The thesis investigates how to effectively address (through visual art) events of war and traumatic ...
In increasingly mediatized cultures it is essential that criminologists develop more sophisticated u...
The thesis investigates how to effectively address (through visual art) events of war and traumatic ...
Part 1 of this article detailed the controversy surrounding the 1992 television image of Fikret Alic...
Editor's Note: This touching essay, accompanied by reproductions of several works, and conclude...
This article examines if and how memorial museums exhibit graphic atrocity photographs, including pi...
Historical and contemporary cases of collective violence show an incremental use of photography and ...
Picturing Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia examines the role which atrocity photographs ...
Group show, curated by Paul Lowe. Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potent...
By taking 9/11 as a starting point, this thesis examines the spectatorship of invisible atrocity ima...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
In the wake of a resurgence of Holocaust scholarship in North America in the 1980s, a growing intere...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
The images of atrocity, either analog or digital, are always the trace of an encounter between the g...
In the wake of a resurgence of Holocaust scholarship in North America in the 1980s, a growing intere...
The thesis investigates how to effectively address (through visual art) events of war and traumatic ...
In increasingly mediatized cultures it is essential that criminologists develop more sophisticated u...
The thesis investigates how to effectively address (through visual art) events of war and traumatic ...
Part 1 of this article detailed the controversy surrounding the 1992 television image of Fikret Alic...
Editor's Note: This touching essay, accompanied by reproductions of several works, and conclude...
This article examines if and how memorial museums exhibit graphic atrocity photographs, including pi...
Historical and contemporary cases of collective violence show an incremental use of photography and ...
Picturing Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia examines the role which atrocity photographs ...
Group show, curated by Paul Lowe. Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potent...