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Abu Ghraib Effect Stephen F. Eisenman

Abu Ghraib Effect By Stephen F. Eisenman

Abu Ghraib Effect by Stephen F. Eisenman


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Condition - Very Good
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Summary

By identifying the pathos formula at work in the Abu Ghraib images, and by explaining how this insidious form of visual propaganda has been resisted, the author points the way towards a more effective use of political images in the war against the war on terror.

Abu Ghraib Effect Summary

Abu Ghraib Effect by Stephen F. Eisenman

The line between punishment and torture can be thin, but the entire world agreed it was crossed at Abu Ghraib. Or did it? George W. Bush emerged from the scandal relatively unscathed, winning a second term months later, only a few low-ranking soldiers involved in the crimes were prosecuted, and the issue went almost entirely unmentioned during the mid-term elections in 2006. Where was the public outcry? Why was the American public largely unmoved by the images of torture and humiliation? Stephen F. Eisenman posits an unsettling explanation, which is rooted in the character of the Abu Ghraib photographs themselves. Eisenman argues that the complex of violent and sexual motifs found in the photographs constitutes the Abu Ghraib effect', an instance of a longstanding Western pathos formula', whereby victims are shown taking pleasure in their own chastisement and pain. The cruel formula is widespread in the history of art and visual culture from Hellenistic Greece to modern times, and generally serves as an instrument of imperialist self-justification and racist violence. But Eisenman also argues that it has not gone unchallenged. Artists from Hogarth and Goya to Picasso and Leon Golub, as well as other dissidents, have worked assiduously to undermine this vicious tradition of torture images. By identifying the pathos formula at work in the Abu Ghraib images, and by explaining how this insidious form of visual propaganda has been resisted, Eisenman points the way towards a more effective use of political images in the war against the war on terror.

Abu Ghraib Effect Reviews

a potent book ... This brilliantly argued volume should be read by all art historians The Art Book Illuminating and timely ... Eisenman's concepts and questions constitute a challenging discourse on politics and art. Art in America An unflinching analysis that will long endure as will our stark memories of the horrors unleashed by the administration of George W. Bush. -- Professor David Craven, author of Art and Revolution in Latin America, 1910 1990 Stephen Eisenman's provocative discussion of the omnipresence of the imagery of aggression, domination, and subjugation in Western art is as disturbing as it is timely. Coming as it does in the wake of the exposure of American torture of detainees, it reminds us that what we call "culture" is as marked by the evidence of cruelty and brutality as is the history of warfare itself. His book is an exemplary demonstration of the inseparability of the aesthetic and the political. -- Abigail Solomon-Godeau, Professor of Art History, University of California Santa Barbara

About Stephen F. Eisenman

Stephen F. Eisenman is Professor in the Department of Art History at Northwestern University. His other books include The Temptation of Saint Redon (1992), Gauguin's Skirt (1997) and Nineteenth-Century Art, A Critical History, now in its third edition. He lives in Highland Park, Illinois.

Additional information

GOR006469929
9781861893093
1861893094
Abu Ghraib Effect by Stephen F. Eisenman
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Reaktion Books
2007-02-01
128
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Abu Ghraib Effect