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022_000055/0000

War Matters. Constructing Images of the Other (1930s to 1950s)

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Field of science
Antropológia, néprajz / Anthropology, ethnology (12857), Kultúrakutatás, kulturális sokféleség / Cultural studies, cultural diversity (12950), Társadalomszerkezet, egyenlőtlenségek, társadalmi mobilitás, etnikumközi kapcsolatok / Social structure, inequalities, social mobility, interethnic relations (12525), Vizuális művészetek, előadóművészetek, dizájn / Visual arts, performing arts, design (13046)
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000055/0017
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Page 18 [18]
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022_000055/0017

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16 Dagnoslaw Demski, Liisi Laineste, Kamila Baraniecka-Olszewska devastation and suffering that "we" have to endure. Photography comes to stand for much more than just ‘freezing our memories on film’. The attitudes visible in photography start to resemble the premises of caricature—they exaggerate the features of the people and events depicted in them, bring forth the unusual, the alien and the abnormal, criticise and moralise etc. The seemingly objective manner of the photograph starts to crumble and reveal the ideologically motivated nature of (all) representations. RK Stuart Hall claims that our subjectivities are formed through a troubled but unconscious dialogue with the Other. We can never complete the process of constructing our identity; there is no stable inner core to the Self. Moreover, “it is formed in relation to something which completes us but which—since it lies outside us—we in some way always lack” (Hall 1997: 238). The perception of the Other is always connected with that of the Self, and the aggression and offensive stereotyping seen in wartime images arises from ‘our’ refusal to recognise the enemy as a person in the way that ‘we’ are and the country of the enemy as a place equal to where ‘we’ live (Bhabha 1986 cited in Hall 1997: 238). Taking the representations of war that stand for different war experiences in all of their subjectivity and particularity, the whole volume presents, analyses and discusses these experiences in order to reach a comparative conclusion on how war matters in relation to images—i.e. how it affects the construction of the Other in a visual format. Documentary and representational practices functioned at that time as an attempt to record and legitimise the changes, atrocities, and political decisions. Both the photographic and comic images approved war and violence, served the same goal, tried to mobilise people and shape their attitudes. In contrast to caricatures, (documentary or propaganda) photography displays one more aspect: as Barthes has stated, photography “reproduces a set of social relations that made the taking of the photograph possible” (cited in Apel 2012: 6). In this way we come back to the idea that constructing the Other is always relational. Overview of the Chapters The equation that we are studying in the present volume has three variables, the interactions of which form the core of our interest: war as a general context, images of war as the more specific focus within this context, and finally Others as a separate category depicted in images of war. The first section of the volume, entitled Wartime Images: Marking out the Battlefield, focuses on laying down a general backdrop for the more specific studies that follow, providing a comparative, theoretical and methodological grid that brings together the three variables that we see as central to this volume.

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