Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
AMBIGUOUS POWER OF THE IMAGE
Here
I am once again worrying away at how perceptions can be formed and twisted by
data that isn’t necessarily reliable.
My
problem for the fortnight is this – why can a single and decontextualised image
sway opinion and make people adopt partisan positions about complex problems?
I’ll
give two examples – one of a faked photograph and one of a perfectly authentic
photograph.
In
1936, in the first year of the Spanish Civil War, the Hungarian
photo-journalist Endre Friedmann, who had adopted the name “Robert Capa”, took
a photograph which, he claimed, showed a Republican Soldier at the moment he
was shot dead by a Nationalist sniper. Capa said that he had snapped the image
while he was crouching in a nearby trench, that he had raised his camera and
clicked the button without even looking through the viewfinder and that he had,
by sheer luck, caught this vivid image. The photo became known as The Falling
Soldier. It was rapidly reproduced in America’s old “Life” magazine and became
iconic. For those who supported the Spanish Republic it was an inspiring image
of a man giving his life for a good cause. Since it first appeared, the photo
has been reproduced more than almost any other photo of the 20th
century, sculptures have been based on it and murals copied from it.
But
there are two problems with Capa’s snap. One is material, the other
philosophical.
The
material problem is that, as scrupulous and minute research has shown, the
photo is almost certainly a fake. There is not just the troubling fact that
Capa himself a number of times changed his story about how the image was
produced. There is the more important fact that the image appeared in the same
roll of film as images of militiamen quite clearly being posed by the
photographer – images that came both before and after this iconic image of a
man falling down. And, quite damningly, a study of the background has allowed
people to pinpoint where exactly the snap was taken – a place far from any
combat zone.
Now
there was nothing either new or too outrageous about photo-journalists posing
images in wartime. In an era when photographers were hardly ever in real combat
zones, and where it was fiendishly difficult to take real action shots, it was
almost customary for photographers to ask soldiers to pose in a warlike manner
either before any combat had been engaged in, or after it was over. For
example, after the Easter Rising in Dublin in 1916 had been crushed, Tommies
were quite happy to pose behind a barricade for a photographer, and pretend
they were fighting. Thousands of similar images were made in the first half of
the 20th century.
The
philosophical problem is the one that really worries me, however. Even if the image of the Falling Soldier were real, what does it actually tell us
about the civil war in which it was taken? Of itself, does it tell us that one
side or the other was the more righteous cause? Does it tell us that the man
(supposedly) dying was a noble individual motivated by high ideals? Isn’t it
obvious to any rational mind that men are killed, heroically or in striking
poses or otherwise, on both sides of any war? Of itself, the image proves
nothing – only that a large audience was already predisposed to interpret it as
an image of singular heroism and idealism. It is completely decontextualised.
Now
for the authentic photograph that was definitely not faked. Towards the very
end of 2015, the body of a 3-year-old boy washed up on a beach in Turkey. He
was Alan Kurdi, a Syrian refugee of Kurdish heritage. His father, with other
refugees, was attempting to reach a Greek island and hoped to travel from
Europe to Canada – but the un-seaworthy craft in which they were being taken,
by people-smugglers, sank, and this little boy was one of those who drowned.
It
would take a very hard-hearted person not to be moved by such an image. The
death of this child was tragic. The death of this child was avoidable. No
wonder that, very quickly, this image “went viral”, was reproduced in nearly
every Western newspaper and on every news feed and was (like the Falling
Soldier) the subject of art works, posters, and reconstructions as protest.
But
again, we have those nagging problems of context. What does the image itself
tell us? That a little child has been cruelly drowned. From this, are we to
adduce that European attitudes to refugees are cruel and xenophobic (as many of
those who used this image in protests would claim)? Or would it be wiser to
blame exploitative people-smugglers who take money from desperate refugees,
then put them in unsafe vessels? I am not making light of this, because I find
this image particularly disturbing, particularly wrenching. Helpless innocence
has been killed. But it is still impossible to draw from this image alone a
wider political or social message. Of itself, it is a singular thing.
We
have all heard the old cynic’s statement that “One death is a tragedy, a
million are a statistic”. It has been claimed, truthfully, that images of
individuals suffering in wars and other disasters can make those wars and
disasters more real to distant consumers of news. We are looking at real
people, not statistics. We are engaged with them as fellow human beings. We are
moved by their plight. This is claimed as one of the chief purposes of
photo-journalism (and now tele-journalism).
I
do not quarrel with this, but I still maintain that a single and
decontextualised image (or series of images in the case of the little boy) does
not of itself convey anything more to us than a general humane response. Who is
in the right and who is in the wrong in the circumstances in which the image
was taken? The image itself does not tell us.
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