Through Amateur Eyes: Film and Photography in Nazi Germany
By (Author) Frances Guerin
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
29th January 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
Digital, video and new media arts
Photography and photographs
Social and cultural history
943.086
Paperback
352
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 23mm
We have seen the films of professionals and propagandists celebrate Adolf Hitler, his SS henchmen, and the Nazi Party. But what of the documentary films and photographs of amateurs, soldiers, and others involved in the war effort who were simply going about their lives amid death and destruction And what of the films and photographs that want us to believe there was no death and destruction This book asks how such images have shaped our memories and our memorialization of World War II and the Holocaust. Frances Guerin considers the implications of amateur films and photographs taken by soldiers, bystanders, resistance workers, and others in Nazi Germany.
"Through Amateur Eyes is a creative study of amateur photographs in the Nazi era. Full of insightful analysis and broad, interdisciplinary reading, Frances Guerin demonstrates the instability of images, showing how even photographs taken with the perpetrators eyes and cameras can teach us much about the lives of the Third Reichs victims." Eric D. Weitz, author of Weimar Germany: Promise and Tragedy
Frances Guerin is lecturer of film studies at the University of Kent, Canterbury. She is the author of A Culture of Light: Cinema and Technology in 1920s Germany (Minnesota, 2005) and coeditor of The Image and the Witness: Trauma, Memory, and Visual Culture.