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War Faces on Screen: Photography, Film, and the Politics of Representation

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

War Faces on Screen: Photography, Film, and the Politics of Representation

Contributors:

By (Author) Dr. Katy Parry
Edited by Mani Sharpe

ISBN:

9798765129203

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Bloomsbury Academic

Publication Date:

5th March 2026

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Armed conflict
Photography and photographs
Military history: post-WW2 conflicts

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

240

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Description

This ground-breaking collection brings together a diverse array of scholars who interrogate how the suffering, exhilaration, and memory of wars both past and present have been mediated through the visual trope of the face.

The essays demonstrate that this trope is found in a long history of artistic trends: from the so-called spirit photographs that emerged during the American Civil War, depicting the faces of soldiers blurred by the effects of double exposure, to Tom Leas famous 1944 painting of a shell-shocked marine, entitled That 2,000-Yard Stare, to the invention of the cinematic facial close-up in the 1910s, as famously deployed in D.W. Griffiths war-epic, The Birth of the Nation (1915), right through to more contemporary, facially-orientated, innovations in photojournalism, AI-image generation, digital colourisation, and visual social media platforms (such as Instagram, TikTok), all of which have been deployed to both document and distort the phenomenon of war.

At once interdisciplinary, transnational, and transhistorical, War Faces on Screen discusses representations of the face in war photography, illustrating the invisible violence of psychic trauma; the aesthetics of the cinematic close-up, drone vision, and how the selective digital colourisation of bodies and faces from archival footage imposes a moral hierarchy; decolonisation and defacement in Hollywood films, where empathy is displaced from the ethnic other to the suffering Western soldier; and how the face is central to articulating the sentiment of colonial and civil wars. Ultimately, it forms a radically innovative contribution to the study of image-making and war-making.

Author Bio

Katy Parry is Professor of Media and Politics at the University of Leeds, UK. Her work focuses on visual politics and activism, images of war, and media representations of (post-)military experience. Her books include Visual Communication: Understanding Images in Media Culture (2019), co-authored with Giorgia Aiello, and Spaces of War, War of Spaces (Bloomsbury, 2020), co-edited with Sarah Maltby, Ben OLoughlin and Laura Roselle. She is a co-editor of the journal Media, War & Conflict.

Mani Sharpe is Lecturer in Film at the University of Leeds, UK. He is author of the monograph Late-colonial French Cinema: Filming the Algerian War of Independence (2023). He is generally interested in how films convey the process of military-colonial loss through different formal techniques and themes.

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