ABSTRACT

This collection provides a transnational, interdisciplinary perspective on artistic responses to war from 1914 to the present, analysing a broad selection of the rich, complex body of work which has emerged in response to conflicts since the Great War. Many of the creators examined here embody the human experience of war: first-hand witnesses who developed a unique visual language in direct response to their role as victim, soldier, refugee, resister, prisoner and embedded or official artist. Contributors address specific issues relating to propaganda, wartime femininity and masculinity, women as war artists, trauma, the role of art in soldiery, memory, art as resistance, identity and the memorialisation of war.

part 1I|60 pages

Home Front

chapter 1|13 pages

‘Picturing’ World War I

German War Bond Posters and the Modern Public

chapter 2|12 pages

‘Our Lovely Countryside’

Capturing the Image of Britain at War in Commercial Advertising, 1939–1945

chapter 4|12 pages

America’s Forgotten Soldier Art

The World War II Camp Art Programmes

part 61II|66 pages

Art, Activism and Resistance

chapter 6|13 pages

Strategies of Liberation

Jean Dubuffet’s Métro Series

chapter 7|14 pages

Laughter at War

chapter 8|13 pages

Another Egyptian Revolution

Khayamiya as War Art

chapter 9|12 pages

Art and Conflict Resolution

Bloody Sunday, Northern Ireland

chapter 10|12 pages

Terms of Engagement

Canadian War Art in a Time of Perpetual Warfare

part 127III|63 pages

Traumatic Memory and Victimhood

chapter 11|12 pages

Kārlis Padegs’ Red Laugh

The High Song of Insanity

chapter 12|10 pages

Vietnam

Memory of Desecration in Brian De Palma’s Casualties of War

chapter 13|14 pages

The Soldier’s Diary

A Record of Erased Time

chapter 14|12 pages

The Fakhouri File

Traumatic Memory in the Work of Walid Raad

chapter 15|13 pages

Polyrhythmics and Migrating Voices

part 191IV|59 pages

Collective Memory and Commemoration

chapter 16|11 pages

A Paroxysm of Battle Painting

Adriano de Sousa Lopes and the Great War

chapter 17|10 pages

Let There Be No More War

Jack B. Yeats’s Grief in Context

chapter 18|12 pages

Remembering Port Said 1956

Images of Popular Resistance in Egyptian Documentaries

chapter 19|11 pages

Orphan Nation

Orphan Photographs of the Korean War in Visual Culture

chapter 20|13 pages

A Lost State of Plenitude

Commemorating the Homeland War in Public Spaces in Croatia