Portraits of violence : war and the aesthetics of disfigurement / Suzannah Biernoff.

  • Biernoff, Suzannah
Date:
[2017]
  • Books

About this work

Description

This book explores the image and idea of facial disfigurement in one of its most troubling modern formations, as a symbol and consequence of war. It opens with Nina Berman's iconic photograph Marine Wedding, which provoked a debate about the medical, military, and psychological response to serious combat injuries. While these issues remain urgent, it is equally crucial to interrogate the representation of war and injury. The concepts of valor, heroism, patriotism, and courage assume visible form and do their cultural work when they are personified and embodied. The mutilated or disabled veteran's body can connote the brutalizing, dehumanizing potential of modern combat. Suzannah Biernoff draws on a wide variety of sources mainly from WWI but also contemporary photography and computer games. Each chapter revolves around particular images: Marine Wedding is discussed alongside Stuart Griffiths' portraits of British veterans; Henry Tonks' drawings of WWI facial casualties are compared to the medical photographs in the Gillies Archives; the production of portrait masks for the severely disfigured is approached through the lens of documentary film and photography; and finally the haunting image of one of Tonks's patients reappears in BioShock, a highly successful computer game. The book simultaneously addresses a neglected area in disability studies; puts disfigurement on the agenda for art history and visual studies; and makes a timely and provocative contribution to the literature on the First World War.

Publication/Creation

Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, [2017]

Physical description

viii, 213 pages : black and white illustrations ; 24 cm.

Bibliographic information

Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-205) and index.

Contents

Introduction -- The elusive portrait -- Aversion: a history -- Repairing war's ravages -- Flesh poems -- The afterlife of Henry Lumley -- Conclusion.

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatus
    History of Medicine
    LV.C
    Open shelves

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 0472130293
  • 9780472130290