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English
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
03 April 2025
How can photographers, curators, and editors convey narratives of peace and not just stories of war?

Providing interdisciplinary and international perspectives on timely debates, Picturing Peace explores humanitarianism and visual culture, community collaboration, collective memory, and imagined futures for creating and sustaining of civil societies. How things look and are perceived are not superficial issues; when it comes to war and conflict, photography is vitally relevant not only to documenting violence, but also to rebuilding peaceful societies.

The volume examines the intersecting issues of visual culture and peacebuilding, including: the genealogies of photography and conflict, decolonisation and the gaze, the significance of archival material, as well as recent peacebuilding initiatives. Exploring multiple forms of peace photography, the volume offers a range of voices from preeminent international scholars, as well as interviews with practicing photographers who have experience of working with post-conflict communities. As such, the book provides a timely investigation into the politics of representation, questioning how photographers might help foster social relationships, transform conflicts, and reconcile communities in the image-oriented cultures.
Edited by:   , , , ,
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781350258853
ISBN 10:   1350258857
Series:   New Encounters: Arts, Cultures, Concepts
Pages:   352
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Tom Allbeson is Reader in Media and Photographic History at the School of Journalism, Media and Culture at Cardiff University, UK. Jolyon Mitchell is Principal of St John’s College, Durham and a Professor specialising in Religion, Violence and Peacebuilding at Durham University, UK. Pippa Oldfield is Senior Lecturer in Photography at Teesside University, UK, and former Head of Programme at Impressions Gallery, Bradford.

Reviews for Picturing Peace: Photography, Conflict Transformation, and Peacebuilding

Can images help us imagine peace in a world plagued by war? Through a series of masterful essays, co-authored by leading scholars and award-winning photographers, this ground-breaking volume reminds us that making peace is also about visualising peace, about seeing how peace might work in pictures - a work just as arduous as it is noble and just as fragile as it is necessary. A must-read! * Lilie Chouliaraki, Chair in Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK * War photographers say their images call for peace, but what it means to visualize alternatives to conflict has been undertheorized in analyses of our image world. This collection rectifies that, bringing together many leading writers to open up new imaginaries. * David Campbell, Education Director, The VII Foundation * This excellent book confronts readers and viewers with a number of searching and difficult questions. Presenting a new affective terrain that explores slowness and the unspectacular, local participation and agency, it questions who is looking, and for whom. It suggests how mainstream categories of war and humanitarian photography have obscured our capacity to see difficult spaces in sensitive ways, and this shift brings something very new. * Patricia Hayes, National Research Foundation SARChI Chair in Visual History & Theory, University of the Western Cape, South Africa. *


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