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Arms Against Fury: Magnum Photographers in Afghanistan
 
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Arms Against Fury: Magnum Photographers in Afghanistan [Hardcover]

Robert Dannin (Editor), Magnum Photographers (Photographer)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

September 1, 2002
Arms Against Fury examines the dramatic struggle of the Afghan people through the lens of Magnum photographers, dating back to co-founder George Rodger’s documentation of the country’s role in World War II. Ever since, Magnum’s intrepid photographers have crisscrossed the country’s striking landscape from the Central Asian steppes to the parched southern desert by way of the Hindu Kush mountains surrounding Kabul and the adjacent Panjshir Valley.

As early as the 1950s, Eve Arnold and Marc Riboud filed unprecedented stories from a legendary Shangri-La, showing a small kingdom struggling for statehood against the forces of underdevelopment and unfortunate geographic position during the Cold War. The ultimate overthrow of the monarchy and brutal liquidation of Afghanistan’s constitutional government in 1978 heralded the arrival of Soviet-style communism. Peasants in Nuristan rebelled immediately and initiated a jihad that was covered first by Raymond Depardon and then by Steve McCurry, and later by renowned photojournalist Abbas, who also focused on the progress of the mujahedin, who eventually faced a massive Red Army invasion and savage aerial bombardments.

The victory against the Soviets also signaled the beginning of a civil war that began in 1992. Documented by Luc Delahaye, Christopher Steele-Perkins, Abbas, and Steve McCurry, Afghan militias destroyed large swathes of Kabul. The Taliban militia subdued warring factions in 1996 and proclaimed an Islamic emirate. Steele-Perkins was one of the few journalists to report from Afghanistan during this period of theocratic tyranny. In the wake of the September 11 attacks on the United States, the hated Taliban were shaken from power by a loose alliance of mujahedin backed by American forces. Yet nothing seemed to remedy the miserable spectacle of a ruined country littered with ten million land mines and thousands of innocent victims of the hi-tech war on terror.

The future of Afghanistan, as depicted by Abbas, Eve Arnold, Luc Delahaye, Thomas Dworzak, Alex Majoli, Steve McCurry, and Francesco Zizola, remains uncertain at best.

Containing additional photographic work by Ian Berry, Elliott Erwitt, Stuart Franklin, Philip Jones Griffiths, Susan Meiselas, and Wayne Miller; commentary by the photographers; and several illustrated essays, Arms Against Fury will become an indispensable reference for documentary studies, social history, and critical photography.

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Arms Against Fury: Magnum Photographers in Afghanistan + Afghanistan: A Darkness Visible + Moises Saman: Afghanistan Broken Promise
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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Magnum was founded in 1947 to ensure the free photographic expression of political history throughout the world. In this volume, 17 members of its elite band of professionals present 400 four-color and duotone photographs depicting Afghanistan from the late 1940s to the present. The book is divided into five well-conceived chapters, with the chapter introductions, the captions, and the photographs themselves leaving an overall impression of death, destruction, and hopelessness. Some of the photographs of the dead and injured are quite graphic and disturbing. Dannin (urban anthropology, NYU), who has edited the work of photojournalists for 25 years, here exercises careful editorial control, offering a fairly balanced spread of photographs over five decades and between urban Kabul and the countryside. Recommended for public libraries.
John F. Riddick, Central Michigan Univ. Lib., Mt. Pleasant
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Magnum Photos, established in April 1947, summoned "concerned" photojournalists to unite in defense of free expression and individual copyright in an era of nascent magazine conglomerates who demanded total ownership of their correspondents' pictures. Steeped in the euphoria of Europe's liberation from wartime terror, the founders of Magnum envisioned a cooperative venture that would guarantee a truly independent media. It was this dream, tethered to the political foundations of social democracy, which brought together founders Henri Cartier-Bresson, George Rodger, Robert Capa, and David Seymour (Chim). More than fifty years later, the calling of Magnum's peer-selected members has not changed. They continue the struggle to represent history through the lens of personal experience, competing against all odds in an age of predatory media giants. Robert Dannin has edited the work of photojournalists for twenty-five years. As the editorial director of Magnum from 1985 to 1990, he produced Sebastiao Salgado Jr.'s "An Archaelogy of the Industrial age, " eventually published as Workers (Aperture). He was also the text editor for Jame Nactwey's Inferno (Phaidon). Dannin now teaches urban anthropology at New York University and recently published Black Pilgrimage to Islam (Oxford University Press).

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: powerHouse Books; 1 edition (September 1, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1576871517
  • ISBN-13: 978-1576871515
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 1 x 11.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #328,036 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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5.0 out of 5 stars Afghanistan Photographs 1955-2001, December 9, 2009
By 
William Garrison Jr. (Bellevue, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Arms Against Fury: Magnum Photographers in Afghanistan (Hardcover)
Over 230 pages of hundreds of photographs taken throughout Afghanistan between 1955-2001. About equally divided between color and black&white photographs. The photos between 1980-2000 look eerily similar, despite the Russians moving in and out, with the Taliban moving in and out, and with the American soldiers arriving in 2001, nothing seems to have changed between these years: so much rubble. As there is little text, this is not an `educational' reference book. This is a collection of photographs taken by many different photographers of different nationalities who traveled through Afghanistan. There are only 2-3 photographs of dead Taliban soldiers, but nothing really gory that should keep it out of some junior high-library (although the color photo of a dead government soldier's bloated face on page 113 isn't for the faint-hearted). Few `battle-action' photos, no photos of the Taliban stoning women. The photograph showing a criminal chained to the prison floor (p. 223) reminded me of similar containment that I had seen in Haiti in 1993, and the photo of a crumbled-up painting of a nude female in the National Art Museum depicted the anti- `avant garde' morals of the Taliban government. Alas, these everyday-life photographs -- although they depict many country and city-street scenes of war amputees, destroyed homes, and impoverished women and children -- cannot capture the heat, the cold, nor the dustiness of the country. Nary a scenic photo anywhere. I had correspondence with the last Afghanistan king back in the early 1960s, I'm sure he would have been extremely saddened with these photographs in seeing how ravaged his country became during the last quarter of the Twentieth Century.
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