The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)

This essay intervenes in debates about the depiction of conflict since 1945, by comparing two highly significant photographic ‘hacks’: Brecht’s War Primer (Kriegsfibel) 1955; and Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2, 2011. Kriegsfibel is a collection of images, snipped from wartime newspapers...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bernadette Buckley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-04-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/2/34
id doaj-8d72c2785f7c49e9932e77c42ef991c8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8d72c2785f7c49e9932e77c42ef991c82020-11-24T22:54:25ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872018-04-01723410.3390/h7020034h7020034The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)Bernadette Buckley0Department of Politics and International Relations, Goldsmiths, University of London, London SE14 6NW, UKThis essay intervenes in debates about the depiction of conflict since 1945, by comparing two highly significant photographic ‘hacks’: Brecht’s War Primer (Kriegsfibel) 1955; and Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2, 2011. Kriegsfibel is a collection of images, snipped from wartime newspapers and magazines, which Brecht selected and situated alongside the four-line verses that he used to comment upon and re-caption his pictures. These acerbic ‘photo–epigrams’ captured Brecht’s view, firstly, that photography had become a ‘terrible weapon against truth’ and secondly, that by repositioning the individual image, its political instrumentality might be restored. When, more than half a century later, Broomberg & Chanarin decide to re-work Kriegsfibel to produce War Primer 2, they effectively crash into and redouble the Brechtian hack; updating and further complicating Brecht’s insights; re-animating his original concerns with photography as a form of collective historical elucidation and mounting, literally on top of his pictures of wartime conflict, images from the ‘war on terror’. This essay argues that the re-doubling of War Primer performs multiple critical tasks. It explores the Kriegsfibel as a dynamic confrontation with images of war and stages the enduring need to interrogate and actively re-function images of conflict from WW2 to the present day. It re-examines debates about images as weapons of war in themselves, and finally, it situates the Kriegsfibel assemblage in relation to contemporary understandings of ‘post-truth’.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/2/34Brecht’s KriegsfibelBroomberg &ampChanarinwar/anti-war photographyhack/hijackradical pedagogytruth-gamesanachronisminterventionist thinking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernadette Buckley
spellingShingle Bernadette Buckley
The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)
Humanities
Brecht’s Kriegsfibel
Broomberg &amp
Chanarin
war/anti-war photography
hack/hijack
radical pedagogy
truth-games
anachronism
interventionist thinking
author_facet Bernadette Buckley
author_sort Bernadette Buckley
title The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)
title_short The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)
title_full The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)
title_fullStr The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)
title_full_unstemmed The Politics of Photobooks: From Brecht’s War Primer (1955) to Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2 (2011)
title_sort politics of photobooks: from brecht’s war primer (1955) to broomberg & chanarin’s war primer 2 (2011)
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2018-04-01
description This essay intervenes in debates about the depiction of conflict since 1945, by comparing two highly significant photographic ‘hacks’: Brecht’s War Primer (Kriegsfibel) 1955; and Broomberg & Chanarin’s War Primer 2, 2011. Kriegsfibel is a collection of images, snipped from wartime newspapers and magazines, which Brecht selected and situated alongside the four-line verses that he used to comment upon and re-caption his pictures. These acerbic ‘photo–epigrams’ captured Brecht’s view, firstly, that photography had become a ‘terrible weapon against truth’ and secondly, that by repositioning the individual image, its political instrumentality might be restored. When, more than half a century later, Broomberg & Chanarin decide to re-work Kriegsfibel to produce War Primer 2, they effectively crash into and redouble the Brechtian hack; updating and further complicating Brecht’s insights; re-animating his original concerns with photography as a form of collective historical elucidation and mounting, literally on top of his pictures of wartime conflict, images from the ‘war on terror’. This essay argues that the re-doubling of War Primer performs multiple critical tasks. It explores the Kriegsfibel as a dynamic confrontation with images of war and stages the enduring need to interrogate and actively re-function images of conflict from WW2 to the present day. It re-examines debates about images as weapons of war in themselves, and finally, it situates the Kriegsfibel assemblage in relation to contemporary understandings of ‘post-truth’.
topic Brecht’s Kriegsfibel
Broomberg &amp
Chanarin
war/anti-war photography
hack/hijack
radical pedagogy
truth-games
anachronism
interventionist thinking
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/2/34
work_keys_str_mv AT bernadettebuckley thepoliticsofphotobooksfrombrechtswarprimer1955tobroombergampchanarinswarprimer22011
AT bernadettebuckley politicsofphotobooksfrombrechtswarprimer1955tobroombergampchanarinswarprimer22011
_version_ 1725660136679145472