What does it mean to say that a
photograph is violent? In this project, I explore ideas of
violence and photography, using as examples a handful of
photographs of women and men, mostly posed and mostly
without suggestion of movement or activity. I
begin by considering the proliferation of terms having to do with
force, assault, and pain in central critical essays on
photography by Susan Sontag, Walter Benjamin, John Berger, W.J.T.
Mitchell, and Roland Barthes. I also consider the range of
meanings we give to the word "violence," using Raymond Williams as
a starting point. In the last part of the project, I try
to determine how photographs, even some very ordinary ones,
could be understood as violent, how we might categorize visual
representations of violence, and why these things might
be worth thinking about.