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Wednesday, May 26, 2004
REGARDING THE TORTURE OF OTHERS 

If you haven't already read Susan Sontag's fascinating piece on the images from Abu Ghraib prison, published in this past Sunday's New York Times Magazine, here's an excerpt:

"...A digital camera is a common possession among soldiers. Where once photographing war was the province of photojournalists, now the soldiers themselves are all photographers -- recording their war, their fun, their observations of what they find picturesque, their atrocities -- and swapping images among themselves and e-mailing them around the globe.

"There is more and more recording of what people do, by themselves. At least or especially in America, Andy Warhol's ideal of filming real events in real time -- life isn't edited, why should its record be edited? -- has become a norm for countless Webcasts, in which people record their day, each in his or her own reality show. Here I am -- waking and yawning and stretching, brushing my teeth, making breakfast, getting the kids off to school. People record all aspects of their lives, store them in computer files and send the files around. Family life goes with the recording of family life -- even when, or especially when, the family is in the throes of crisis and disgrace. Surely the dedicated, incessant home-videoing of one another, in conversation and monologue, over many years was the most astonishing material in Capturing the Friedmans, the recent documentary by Andrew Jarecki about a Long Island family embroiled in pedophilia charges.

"An erotic life is, for more and more people, that which can be captured in digital photographs and on video. And perhaps the torture is more attractive, as something to record, when it has a sexual component. It is surely revealing, as more Abu Ghraib photographs enter public view, that torture photographs are interleaved with pornographic images of American soldiers having sex with one another. In fact, most of the torture photographs have a sexual theme, as in those showing the coercing of prisoners to perform, or simulate, sexual acts among themselves. One exception, already canonical, is the photograph of the man made to stand on a box, hooded and sprouting wires, reportedly told he would be electrocuted if he fell off. Yet pictures of prisoners bound in painful positions, or made to stand with outstretched arms, are infrequent. That they count as torture cannot be doubted. You have only to look at the terror on the victim's face, although such '"stress"' fell within the Pentagon's limits of the acceptable. But most of the pictures seem part of a larger confluence of torture and pornography: a young woman leading a naked man around on a leash is classic dominatrix imagery. And you wonder how much of the sexual tortures inflicted on the inmates of Abu Ghraib was inspired by the vast repertory of pornographic imagery available on the Internet -- and which ordinary people, by sending out Webcasts of themselves, try to emulate."


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# posted by Steve Gallagher @ 5/26/2004 03:41:00 PM
Comments (2)

 
Can't agree no more. That's one reason I love New York Times Magazine so much
# posted by Anonymous Anonymous @ 11/30/2006 1:23 AM  

 
Puh-leaze tell me somthing I don't already know.

Yes, the sky can be blue. Water is wet.

Susan Sontag couldn't write her way out of a paper bag. She smells, too. Needs a bath.
# posted by Anonymous Anonymous @ 7/22/2007 8:22 AM  


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