A Good War Is Hard To Find: The Art of Violence in America
By (Author) David Griffith
Soft Skull Press
Soft Skull Press
4th August 2006
United States
General
Non Fiction
303.609730904
Paperback
192
Width 190mm, Height 139mm
211g
In the wake of Abu Ghraib, Americans have struggled to understand what happened in the notorious prison and why. In this elegant series of essays, inflected with a radical Catholic philosophy, David Griffith contends that society's shift from language to image has changed the way people think about violence and cruelty, and that a disconnect exists between images and reality. Griffith meditates on images and literature, finding potent insight into what went wrong at the prison in the works of Susan Sontag, Anthony Burgess, and especially Flannery O'Connor, who often explored the gulf between proclamations of faith and the capacity for evil. Accompanying the essays are illustrated facts about torture, lists of torture methods and their long-term effects, and graphics such as the schematics of the _x0093_pain pathways" in the human body. Together, the images and essays endow the human being with the complexity images alone deny.
Dave Griffith is the author of A Good War is Hard to Find- The Art of Violence in America. His work has appeared in the Utne Reader, Paris Review Daily, Image, The Normal School, Creative Nonfiction, and Los Angeles Review of Books, among others. He is at work on a book titled Pyramid Scheme- Making Art and Being Broke in America. He lives in Michigan with his wife, the writer Jessica Mesman Griffith, and their two children.