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022_000055/0000

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

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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)
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022_000055/0065
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64 Dagnostaw Demski been annexed to the Reich (Wartheland). The film tells the story of a job well done: a job that consisted of taking over a town so as to enable its proper functioning. According to the film, order becomes well established in that Polish town, only at one point the soldier walks past a synagogue that was turned into a stable. In the narration reality seems to be normal, but it also consisted of subordinating the Others in acts that deprived them of dignity and destroyed what was, in their eyes, valuable and respectable. An iconoclastic category is formed through a transformation of the image of the Other, both as physical deformation and visual representation: in the documentation of the acts of destruction, breakage, striking down of public symbols, putting the enemy in a subordinate position, ridiculed and deprived of dignity. The general mind-set of an epoch is always seen in its choice of topics. In this sense, war is the time of creation of difficult visual foundations that form the sense of a given community. Iconoclastic blows are not inflicted by accident, they have a clear goal. Offensive images form the core of iconoclasm. Typically, an attack takes place in the public domain, and the repertoire here is wide-ranging—burning, mutilating, shooting, cutting, putting out eyes, drenching with paint, repainting, reshaping, distorting, egg-throwing etc. Mitchell claims that images are attacked for two reasons, firstly, when “the image is transparently and immediately linked to what it represents’, and secondly, when it is believed that a “picture possesses a kind of vital, living character that makes it capable of feeling what is done to it. It is not merely a transparent medium for communicating a message but something like an animated, living thing, an object with feelings, intentions, desires, and agency” (2005: 127). Offensive pictures are a product of the social context, and, as noted by Mitchell, of a reactionship between “a specific thing and communities” (Ibid.: 131). Some of the photographs presented here offend or desecrate something precious, for example the values connected with the previous authority. They insult, and some of them violate the taboo of morality. An iconoclastic gesture wishes to humiliate or inflict pain; “the object is not to make the image disappear but to keep it around and to render its appearance in a new way, one that is offensive to the image and what it represents” (Ibid.: 132). Photographs presenting iconoclastic gestures in a sense follow the same technique as the deformations employed in caricature. ‘They form a type of discourse with their own subject matter. This discourse, in wartime circumstances, assumes a particularly controversial character. It is a heated exchange, usually painful for one of the sides. On the other hand the representations of a controversial situation or interaction serve to justify decisive moments which reflect, or rather construct, the basis of a new order.

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