Dark Lens
Imaging Germany, 1945
9780226816852
9780226625638
9780226625775
Dark Lens
Imaging Germany, 1945
Esteemed scholar Françoise Meltzer examines images of war ruins in Nazi Germany and the role that images play in how we construct memories of war.
The ruins of war have long held the power to stupefy and appall. Can such ruins ever be persuasively depicted and comprehended? Can images of ruins force us to identify with the suffering of the enemy and raise uncomfortable questions about forgiveness and revenge?
Françoise Meltzer explores these questions in Dark Lens, which uses the images of war ruins in Nazi Germany to investigate problems of aestheticization and the representation of catastrophe. Through texts that give accounts of bombed-out towns in Germany in the last years of the war, painters’ attempts to depict the destruction, and her own mother’s photographs taken in 1945, Meltzer asks if any medium offers a direct experience of war ruins for the viewer. Refreshingly accessible and deeply personal, Dark Lens is a compelling look at the role images play in constructing memory.
The ruins of war have long held the power to stupefy and appall. Can such ruins ever be persuasively depicted and comprehended? Can images of ruins force us to identify with the suffering of the enemy and raise uncomfortable questions about forgiveness and revenge?
Françoise Meltzer explores these questions in Dark Lens, which uses the images of war ruins in Nazi Germany to investigate problems of aestheticization and the representation of catastrophe. Through texts that give accounts of bombed-out towns in Germany in the last years of the war, painters’ attempts to depict the destruction, and her own mother’s photographs taken in 1945, Meltzer asks if any medium offers a direct experience of war ruins for the viewer. Refreshingly accessible and deeply personal, Dark Lens is a compelling look at the role images play in constructing memory.
256 pages | 4 color plates, 41 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2019
Art: Photography
History: European History
Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory
Philosophy: Ethics
Reviews
Table of Contents
What I Remember
By Way of Beginning1 When Words Fail: Writing Disaster
2 Ruination in Painting: Making the Unspeakable Visible
3 Through a Lens, Darkly: Texts and Images
4 Suffering and Victimization
Foregone and Other Conclusions
Appendix
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Index
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