War Images

Fabricating Reality

Raphael Sassower author Louis Cicotello author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Lexington Books

Published:11th Mar '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

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War Images cover

In this book, the authors explore images of war and their effect on society. The authors keep in mind that the experience of being at war is much different from the experience of viewing a war image. Thus it is our responsibility to engage war images critically and personally, because lives are at stake and the future of world peace lies in the balance. The iconic image of any war and its ideological underpinning must be more fully appreciated. This book suggests that consumers of war images must simultaneously pay attention to the details of any given image (and thereby uncover its ideology), while exploring other, alternative images related to the same war, in order to consider other perspectives. The effectiveness of the visual language is such that it demands a careful and critical analysis, such as the one that offered here. The emphasis on the pragmatic reading of images has more to do with the power of images to convey, most commonly, a single idea or value, rather than to engage the observer with an inconsistent or contradictory set of ideas and values. This is where pastiche and collage come into play as compositional strategies through which many images are juxtaposed against each other so as to break the uniformity of an artwork, poster, or photograph. The aesthetic experience, however intense, is not a war experience, and the one could never substitute the other. The visual landscape itself is open to ideological manipulation-selection, framing, focus-so that we end up having to deal with theories and ideas even when we refuse to deal with them at first, for they end up determining and informing what images find their way into our cultural memory.

In its brief compass, War Images offers much more than the title suggests. While providing incisive commentary on specific images of war over the past two centuries, it makes a compelling argument for the centrality of visual literacy to civic education today. The reader will find in Sassower and Cicotello two very informed and reliable guides, who bring the complementary skills of the theorist and the practitioner of art to the complex and often emotive issues that surround the depiction and interpretation of war. No one should ignore their call to incorporate counter-imagery and counter-contextualization into the mainstream of critical political discourse. -- Steve Fuller, Auguste Comte Chair in Social Epistemology, University of Warwick, author of The Intellectual
Sassower and Cicotello's book makes a powerful claim: that images, often contrived images, have become our way of mediating reality. Without doubt war and its horrors is real. Yet no image of war comes without an interpretation, an element of contrivance. Some interpretation is intended; but the intended can be subverted by the observer. The critical approach to images is fraught with difficulty and uncertainty. The authors show that image makers and image disseminators try to exercise control but they no more can than their audience can. -- Ian Jarvie, York University

ISBN: 9780739143100

Dimensions: 240mm x 160mm x 15mm

Weight: 324g

134 pages