grain elevator
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Probably the same place you got my attempt at censorship from.
Do I "believe a photo in a photo-book like this should be taken at face value?" It doesn't matter if I do (I don't), it's bad judgement and insulting because it evokes an old racist trope (even if unintentionally so), so is likely to be hurtful to black people. It's really not that hard a concept to understand. I have read the preface and I don't think the photographer is a racist. Nonetheless I consider it bad judgement and insulting. Weird, huh?
Do you mean me specifically? Did you read my first post in this thread, where I clearly positioned myself against censorship?
I believe Butterini as well as Parr were well meaning, not racists, but they made an insensitive mistake. Everything else is your imagination. Does that statement really warrant the fuss you're making?
I don't think the definition of self-censorship underlying here is reasonable. Do you publish everything in the very first way that springs to your mind? I'm sure you don't. All kinds of considerations can be made, and whether something is unnecessarily insulting is one of them. I mean would you publish a juxtaposition of a turd and a picture of the queen of your country? Maybe you'd think first if it isn't too vulgar and yes, insulting. Now add a centuries long history of discrimination into the equation, and there are some arguments with more weight to be made. So if that's self-censorship, then yes, I advocate it. Nonetheless I'm happy we live in a society where we can be so offensive if we choose to (ok I'm not sure about the laws regarding insulting the queen in your country actually). I try not to, and reserve the right to call people out if they do, nothing more.
Nah, that’s seems to have been pretty steady for the last many years.Racists complaining about anti-white racism is peak 2020.
Might it be that the photographer was comparing the fate of some members of the human race, usually those in low paid menial work, with the fate of our second nearest relative, the gorilla and saying that for some of our species our freedom has only progressed a little by comparison. She happened to have what looks to be African or Afro-Caribbean ancestry.Had it been any other section of the species known as Homo Sapiens other this in the "cage" she found herself would this have caused the same reaction? I doubt itThe allegory in the original images make sense. The choice of a gorilla is offensive, and the root of the offense does not assist in the symbolism.
Any other imprisoned entity would have been better.
The allegory in the original images make sense. The choice of a gorilla is offensive, and the root of the offense does not assist in the symbolism.
Any other imprisoned entity would have been better.
LOTS of censorship in the last few years.
Each case needs unique scrutiny.
One can say the criticism is unfounded or unfair, but calling it "racism" is inappropriate and shows a lack of understanding of what racism is and its effects. In fact, calling it anti-white "racism" is an attempt to shut down discussion, which is a little ironic.
The problem with the choice made by the photographer is that he chose the symbol that would most likely offend the person whose interests he purports to be sympathetic to.It is not offensive unless you somewhat buy into the racist trope yourself (reacting against something is also acknowledging that there is something to push against).
You are implicitly the cocreator of the racism here.
And that is the “joke”.
At least the part of the image pairs facets contested here.
There is a number of commonalities you could point out.
And some things where they are absolute opposites.
They are both of direct African descent (I know “African” as a concept is naive and broad, but it’s not untrue).
They’ve both been brought here, probably against their will, maybe some generations back, and/or are where they are, out of necessity rather than attraction to the location.
One is there imprisoned by resignation and tiredness (we guess), the other is held by bars.
Those are just a few of the things your mind could dwell upon.
Either you misunderstand my point..... or i yours.For most cases I disagree with this. Censorship is the tool of weak minds, in my opinion. The whole premise of free speech is that objectionable speech must be allowed. Otherwise, what's the point? Tomorrow, cancel culture may decide something you have to say is "objectionable."
There is plenty of art and speech I don't like that is floating around. It has never occurred to me that I should try to get it censored. It is easy enough for me to simply not look at it myself if I don't like it. Why can't others do the same?
The problem with the choice made by the photographer is that he chose the symbol that would most likely offend the person whose interests he purports to be sympathetic to.
It is like the furor over blackface.
The use of weird makeup and costumes aren't the problem. It is the historical associations attached to that weird makeup that are the problem.
If you are going to use allegory, don't screw it up by using something that has a whole bunch of other offensive symbolism attached to it.
It was sloppy, insensitive and worth calling out.
And I wouldn't censor it - I would call the photographer out for the symbolism he most likely didn't intend to invoke.
I wrote "unnecessarily insulting", and that, IMHO, was not unnecessary - the taboo needed to be broken. Doing it again today would be mostly pointless. And it's very different from what we're talking about here in that the insulted party was highly privileged, rather than belonging to a discriminated group.I’m reminded of The Beatles and The Sex Pistols “anthems” to the Queen.
Sure there was some outrage, but no one got fired or publicly shamed and character murdered like Parr and others.
No.This is just a small step from passing a law and sending them to jail.
That's magical thinking and a very lazy way to try to find the best argument... questioning one's own impulses is a good thing!And yes I do indeed try to keep the essence of my first thoughts when writing something, while naturally honing it and making it more understandable and precise.
As the cliche goes, the first thought is often the right thought.
Once again you're selling your audience here short. That's all true, but obvious.Being an artist in any medium is something quite different than writing forum posts, articles or essays though.
You are attempting to say “something” (perhaps not one thing but a cluster of more or less vague feelings, emotions and ideas in various ratios) that can not adequately be expressed with words or diagrams.
To address something in a truly new way you often have to surprise attack it from an unexpected angle, and give the spectator a jolt that makes them reconsider fondly held notions and ideas.
That kind of goes implicitly without having to tell it to any reasonably experienced art critic or lover.
You're taking my example too literally. Our argument could be more fruitful if we tried to understand the point the other is trying to make rather than dissecting the irrelevant ways it doesn't work - any analogy is incomplete.There is a huge casm from art of any kind, to being crass and sadistic for its own sake.
That goes double for hurting other living things than yourself physically.
That is a kind of no no in art that has very seldom been successfully crossed.
That goes way back.
Slaughter of animals and murder of humans have often had rituals connected, before and after. But very rarely during.
And almost never has these rituals taken a form of what anyone would call high art, in the modern sense.
I personally think that how something is meant (opens the way to biographical readings and so on, which is boring) usually doesn't matter in art, but that's of course controversial. However here we've started out on this level... oh well.Personally inflicted emotional pain can be as bad or worse. But then this isn’t personal and it isn’t meant specifically to insult.
Anyone can claim to have any emotion, and at some point outside of obvious neglect of the needing and pathological “games” we have to say that most of these conflicts are between adults individuals and should stay there.
Conflict is an unavoidable and necessary part of life.
At one and the same time we take emotions and feelings too seriously and not seriously enough.
I did read it.Did you even read what I wrote? You are not countering the points or comprehending them.
There was no allegory.
He hit the infested, swollen abscess right on the head, as is the privilege and duty of artists, to make it explode in the spectators head.
Thanks for all your rational posts Matt, there are so few in this thread its disturbing.I did read it.
The allegory came from the sentient entity behind actual, as compared to figurative, bars.
The choice of a gorilla, instead of a human, or a parrot, or a cat, or any other of a number of equally unoffensive but equally meaningful alternatives is where the offense comes in.
As I said, sloppy.
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