ABSTRACT

Few phenomena are as formative of our experience of the visual world as displays of suffering. But what does it mean to have an ethical experience of disturbing or traumatizing images? What kind of ethical proposition does an image of pain mobilize? How may the spectator learn from and make use of the painful image as a source of ethical reflection? Engaging with a wide range of visual media--from painting, theatre, and sculpture, to photography, film, and video--this interdisciplinary collection of essays by leading and emerging scholars of visual culture offers a reappraisal of the increasingly complex relationship between images of pain and the ethics of viewing. Ethics and Images of Pain reconsiders the persistent and ever pertinent nexus of aesthetics and ethics, the role of painful images as generators of unpredictable forms of affect, the moral transformation of spectatorship, the ambivalence of the witness and the representation of afflication as a fundamental form of our shared scopic experience. The instructive and illuminating essays in the collection introduce a phenomenological context in which to make sense of our current ecology of excruciating images, one that accentuates notions of responsibility, empathy, and imagination. Contributors trace the images of pain across a miscellany of case studies, and amongst the topics addressed are: the work of artists as disparate as Doris Salcedo, Anselm Kiefer and Bendik Riis; photographs from Abu Ghraib and Rwanda; Hollywood war films and animated documentaries; performances of self-immolations and incidents of police brutality captured on mobile phones.

part I|56 pages

From Voyeurism to Visual Politics

chapter 1|12 pages

Do Not Look at Y/Our Own Peril

Voyeurism as Ethical Necessity, or To See as a Child Again

chapter 2|18 pages

Associates in Crime and Guilt

chapter 3|24 pages

Painful Photographs

From the Ethics of Spectatorship to Visual Politics

part II|55 pages

Looking In, Looking Away

chapter 4|15 pages

The Violence of the Documentary Image

Errol Morris's Standard Operating Procedure

chapter 5|19 pages

Visual Irruptions, Mediated Suffering, and the Robert Dziekanski Tragedy

An Inquiry into the Efficacy of the Image 1

chapter 6|19 pages

Tuning Out, Turning In, and Walking Off

The Film Spectator in Pain

part III|58 pages

Performances

chapter 7|29 pages

Imaging Pain

chapter 8|15 pages

The Unsettling Moment

On Mathilde ter Heijne's Suicide Trilogy

chapter 9|12 pages

Gulag Follies

part IV|54 pages

Mimetic and Mnemonic Frames

chapter 10|20 pages

Imag(in)ing Painful Pasts

Mimetic and Poetic Style in War Films

chapter 11|15 pages

The Sanctified Fallen

The War Film as Witness

chapter 12|17 pages

Medical Horror

Visual Documents From the History of Lobotomy