Humanitarian Photography
Herausgeber: Fehrenbach, Heide; Rodogno, Davide
Humanitarian Photography
Herausgeber: Fehrenbach, Heide; Rodogno, Davide
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This book investigates the historical evolution of 'humanitarian photography' - the mobilization of photography in the service of humanitarian initiatives across state boundaries.
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This book investigates the historical evolution of 'humanitarian photography' - the mobilization of photography in the service of humanitarian initiatives across state boundaries.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 366
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. April 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 530g
- ISBN-13: 9781107639713
- ISBN-10: 1107639719
- Artikelnr.: 45802318
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 366
- Erscheinungstermin: 27. April 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 530g
- ISBN-13: 9781107639713
- ISBN-10: 1107639719
- Artikelnr.: 45802318
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introduction. The morality of sight: humanitarian photography in history
Heide Fehrenbach and Davide Rogodno; 1. Picturing pain: evangelicals and
the politics of pictorial humanitarianism in an imperial age Heather
Curtis; 2. Framing atrocity: photography and humanitarianism Christina
Twomey; 3. The limits of exposure: atrocity photographs in the Congo reform
campaign Kevin Grant; 4. Photography, visual culture, and the Armenian
genocide Peter Balakian; 5. Developing the humanitarian image in late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century China Caroline Reeves; 6.
Photography, cinema, and the quest for influence: the international
committee of the Red Cross in the wake of the first world war Francesca
Piana; 7. Children and other civilians: photography and the politics of
humanitarian image-making Heide Fehrenbach; 8. Sights of benevolence:
UNRRA's recipients portrayed Silvia Salvatici; 9. All the world loves a
picture: the World Health Organization's visual politics, 1948-73 Thomas
David and Davide Rodogno; 10. 'A' as in Auschwitz, 'B' as in Biafra: the
Nigerian civil war, visual narratives of genocide, and the fragmented
universalization of the Holocaust Lasse Heerten; 11. Finding the right
image: British development NGOs and the regulation of imagery Henrietta
Lidchi; 12. Dilemmas of ethical practice in the production of contemporary
humanitarian photography Sanna Nissinen.
Heide Fehrenbach and Davide Rogodno; 1. Picturing pain: evangelicals and
the politics of pictorial humanitarianism in an imperial age Heather
Curtis; 2. Framing atrocity: photography and humanitarianism Christina
Twomey; 3. The limits of exposure: atrocity photographs in the Congo reform
campaign Kevin Grant; 4. Photography, visual culture, and the Armenian
genocide Peter Balakian; 5. Developing the humanitarian image in late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century China Caroline Reeves; 6.
Photography, cinema, and the quest for influence: the international
committee of the Red Cross in the wake of the first world war Francesca
Piana; 7. Children and other civilians: photography and the politics of
humanitarian image-making Heide Fehrenbach; 8. Sights of benevolence:
UNRRA's recipients portrayed Silvia Salvatici; 9. All the world loves a
picture: the World Health Organization's visual politics, 1948-73 Thomas
David and Davide Rodogno; 10. 'A' as in Auschwitz, 'B' as in Biafra: the
Nigerian civil war, visual narratives of genocide, and the fragmented
universalization of the Holocaust Lasse Heerten; 11. Finding the right
image: British development NGOs and the regulation of imagery Henrietta
Lidchi; 12. Dilemmas of ethical practice in the production of contemporary
humanitarian photography Sanna Nissinen.
Introduction. The morality of sight: humanitarian photography in history
Heide Fehrenbach and Davide Rogodno; 1. Picturing pain: evangelicals and
the politics of pictorial humanitarianism in an imperial age Heather
Curtis; 2. Framing atrocity: photography and humanitarianism Christina
Twomey; 3. The limits of exposure: atrocity photographs in the Congo reform
campaign Kevin Grant; 4. Photography, visual culture, and the Armenian
genocide Peter Balakian; 5. Developing the humanitarian image in late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century China Caroline Reeves; 6.
Photography, cinema, and the quest for influence: the international
committee of the Red Cross in the wake of the first world war Francesca
Piana; 7. Children and other civilians: photography and the politics of
humanitarian image-making Heide Fehrenbach; 8. Sights of benevolence:
UNRRA's recipients portrayed Silvia Salvatici; 9. All the world loves a
picture: the World Health Organization's visual politics, 1948-73 Thomas
David and Davide Rodogno; 10. 'A' as in Auschwitz, 'B' as in Biafra: the
Nigerian civil war, visual narratives of genocide, and the fragmented
universalization of the Holocaust Lasse Heerten; 11. Finding the right
image: British development NGOs and the regulation of imagery Henrietta
Lidchi; 12. Dilemmas of ethical practice in the production of contemporary
humanitarian photography Sanna Nissinen.
Heide Fehrenbach and Davide Rogodno; 1. Picturing pain: evangelicals and
the politics of pictorial humanitarianism in an imperial age Heather
Curtis; 2. Framing atrocity: photography and humanitarianism Christina
Twomey; 3. The limits of exposure: atrocity photographs in the Congo reform
campaign Kevin Grant; 4. Photography, visual culture, and the Armenian
genocide Peter Balakian; 5. Developing the humanitarian image in late
nineteenth- and early twentieth-century China Caroline Reeves; 6.
Photography, cinema, and the quest for influence: the international
committee of the Red Cross in the wake of the first world war Francesca
Piana; 7. Children and other civilians: photography and the politics of
humanitarian image-making Heide Fehrenbach; 8. Sights of benevolence:
UNRRA's recipients portrayed Silvia Salvatici; 9. All the world loves a
picture: the World Health Organization's visual politics, 1948-73 Thomas
David and Davide Rodogno; 10. 'A' as in Auschwitz, 'B' as in Biafra: the
Nigerian civil war, visual narratives of genocide, and the fragmented
universalization of the Holocaust Lasse Heerten; 11. Finding the right
image: British development NGOs and the regulation of imagery Henrietta
Lidchi; 12. Dilemmas of ethical practice in the production of contemporary
humanitarian photography Sanna Nissinen.