Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: The Romance of War
1 Technologies of War, Media and Dissent in the Post-9/11 Work of
Krzysztof Wodiczko
2 Historical Reenactment: Romantic Amnesia or Counter-Memory?
Part II: The Body of War
3 Abu Ghraib, Gender, and the Military
4 The Body as Political Corpus
Part III: The Landscape of War
5 Controlling the Frame: Photojournalism, Digital Technology, and
"Modern Warfare"
6 Israel/Palestine and the Political Imaginary
Conclusion: On Human Rights
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
DORA APEL is an associate professor and the W. Hawkins Ferry Endowed Chair in Modern and Contemporary Art History at Wayne State University. She is the author of Memory Effects: The Holocaust and the Art of Secondary Witnessing and Imagery of Lynching: Black Men, White Women, and the Mob (both Rutgers University Press).
"War Culture and the Contest of Images is critical in its analysis
of the politics of oppression shown through different perspectives.
It will be helpful to filmmakers, modern and contemporary art
historians, photojournalists, teachers, and students of visual
communication."
*International Journal of Communication*
"Powerful, thought-provoking, and at times haunting, War Culture
and the Context of Images is an unforgettable, original and
valuable work."
*Journal of Popular Culture*
"Looking closely at the work of contemporary global
photographers, Apel argues that art photography can powerfully
counteract war's official representations and, likewise,
create a new kind of public sphere in which war's meanings can
be scrutinized…a timely and necessary book."
*series editor of Defining Moments in American Photography*
"Strategically positioned between discussions of journalistic,
vernacular images, and works of art, Apel significantly expands the
contemporary conversation on the 'war of images.' This is an
essential contribution to one of the major issues of our day."
*author of Seeing Through Race*
"Essential reading for anyone interested in thinking through the
transformative potential of image culture today."
*RACAR*
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