Messiness in photography, war and transitions to peace: Revisiting Bosnia: Uncertain Paths to Peace

IF 1.7 Q2 COMMUNICATION Media War and Conflict Pub Date : 2022-02-04 DOI:10.1177/17506352211072463
R. Bellmer, F. Möller
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

During and after the wars in ex-Yugoslavia, Bosnia was a laboratory for new photographic approaches to war, violence and civilian suffering. Among these approaches, Fred Ritchin and Gilles Peress’s online photo essay, Bosnia: Uncertain Paths to Peace (1996), emphasized interpretive openness, plurality of meaning, narrative non-linearity and audience interaction, thus redefining as merits what photojournalism had formerly regarded as liabilities. The project convincingly represented the ongoing conflict’s multilayeredness and the vicissitudes of the transition to peace: on a day-to-day level, ambivalence ruled and alliances shifted; chaos, confusion and unpredictability prevailed. The project’s users experience the conflict’s messiness through the website’s overall organization which inhibits easy orientation, thus reproducing the conflict’s disorder. In the grids, in particular, non-sequitur panel-to-panel transitions illustrate the conflict’s lack of sense as it is traditionally understood. The project is an important precursor to current war photography, aiming to acknowledge the messiness of violent conflict rather than reducing it to simple but misleading narratives.
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摄影中的混乱、战争和向和平的过渡:重访波斯尼亚:通往和平的不确定之路
在前南斯拉夫战争期间和之后,波斯尼亚是研究战争、暴力和平民苦难的新摄影方法的实验室。在这些方法中,Fred Ritchin和Gilles Peress的在线摄影文章《波斯尼亚:通往和平的不确定之路》(1996)强调了解释的开放性、意义的多样性、叙事的非线性和观众互动,从而重新定义了摄影新闻业以前视为负债的价值。该项目令人信服地代表了正在进行的冲突的多层次性和向和平过渡的变迁:在日常层面上,矛盾心理占主导地位,联盟发生变化;混乱、混乱和不可预测性盛行。该项目的用户通过网站的整体组织体验到冲突的混乱,这抑制了轻松的定向,从而再现了冲突的混乱。特别是在网格中,不符合逻辑的面板到面板的转换说明了冲突缺乏传统意义。该项目是当前战争摄影的重要先驱,旨在承认暴力冲突的混乱,而不是将其简化为简单但误导性的叙事。
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来源期刊
Media War and Conflict
Media War and Conflict COMMUNICATION-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
15.40%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Media, War & Conflict is a major new international, peer-reviewed journal that maps the shifting arena of war, conflict and terrorism in an intensively and extensively mediated age. It will explore cultural, political and technological transformations in media-military relations, journalistic practices, and new media, and their impact on policy, publics, and outcomes of warfare. Media, War & Conflict is the first journal to be dedicated to this field. It will publish substantial research articles, shorter pieces, book reviews, letters and commentary, and will include an images section devoted to visual aspects of war and conflict.
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