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A Child at Gunpoint

A Case Study in the Life of a Photo

By Richard Raskin

EUR 33.95 (includes 25% VAT)
192 p., softbound, ill., 2004
ISBN 87 7934 099 7

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Contents

Excerpt

 

Widely regarded as the most haunting image we have of the Holocaust, the photo of a young boy with his hands up being driven from the Warsaw ghetto has served as a touchstone for everyone from the Nuremberg prosecutors to Elie Wiesel, and from Susan Sontag to revisionist ranters on the web. Yet despite its enduring status in both popular and academic circles, this touchstone of inhumanity has elicited surprisingly little sustained commentary.

               

In this book, Richard Raskin provides the first extended con­sideration of this photo by examining it from multiple per­spectives. He begins by attempting to describe it objectively as a photographic artefact, carefully detailing its components and composition. He then presents a history of how it came about: to illustrate a report that SS General Jürgen Stroop compiled in 1943, documenting for Himmler how he had crushed the ghetto uprising that spring.

 

In his subsequent discussion, Raskin draws extensively on the statements of SS officials to shed light on how they experi­enced their genocidal project, and what the photograph likely meant to those who took it and selected it for the Stroop Report. The next chapter is devoted to the claims made for the identity of the boy with his hands up, as well as for the other captives and the SS man with the machine gun.                     

 

Clearly and movingly written, A Child at Gunpoint will engage the general reader as well as specialists in photography, Holocaust studies, Judaica and World War II. Highly recommended for libraries.

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Series

Black Sea Studies is concerned with ethnic relations, cultural interaction, and economic interdependence in the Black Sea region c. 700 BC-AD 325.

Award

The Press received an award for excellent book design in 2004.

Catalogue

Please download our export catalogue 2005.

Aarhus University Press · Aarhus · Copenhagen · Phone +45 8942 5370 · Fax +45 8942 5380 · www.unipress.dk