Monday, September 12, 2011

National Geographic's "Afghan Girl"

In a response to my earlier post We Look As They Hide,  Corax asked me to say something about the famous June 1985 National Geographic cover of an "Afghan girl." 


National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry took the photo in 1984 in a refugee camp in Pakistan. The young woman's portrait was used as the face of the cover article "Along Afghanistan's War-Torn Frontier." In the April 2002 article titled "A Life Revealed" by Cathy Newman, McCurry recalls shooting the photograph and notes he did not know at the time the photograph would be anything special. Newman describes the photograph this way, "The portrait by Steve McCurry turned out to be one of those images that sears the heart […]. Her eyes are sea green. They are haunted and haunting, and in them you can read the tragedy of a land drained by war."

Lutz and Collins would categorize the young woman's penetrating stare as the non-Western subject's gaze; this type in which the photographed subject confronts the camera make up, according to Lutz and Collins, 25% of the photos depicting non-Western subjects. The difficulty of course is how to understand what this particular confrontation signifies: hostility, vulnerability, shared humanity?

I wish I had some wise, insightful thing to tell you Corax, but I don't about this image alone. What I find fascinating, however, is the reuse of this particular image. 

In January 2002 McCurry returned to Pakistan with National Geographic Television and Film's Explorer in search of the woman whom he photographed in 1984. Neither McCurry nor anyone at National Geographic knew her name because women did not give their names to strangers, and so this truly was a search. To find her, McCurry and others showed Pakistanis and Afghans the cover photo, and eventually she was located. National Geographic discovered her name is Sharbat Gula. 

If you read the article on-line, this is the main image on the article's first page



But here's the cover for the June 2002 issue:


So what's going on here? The U.S. war in Afghanistan. The West's attempt to end Taliban subjugation of women.

How are we to read the magazine's cover? This face that we (readers of National Geographic) knew so well is not available to us -- found, yet hidden. We can only see her through the older photograph, before the rise of the Taliban and, importantly, before the 9-11 attacks on the U.S. It is very hard for me to see this cover and not see paired victims (women and the US) and a heroic, liberating force (the US).

It's beautiful and arresting, and oh so troubling.

Thanks for asking Corax!

Human Displays: Sara Baartman, Minik Wallace, Ota Benga, and Ishi

The story of Sara Baartman is haunting and heart-breaking, and it's told well in Zola Maseko's The Life and Times of Sara Baartman: "The Hottentot Venus".

Sara Baartman (I pulled this photo from here,
but I do not know the original source. I suspect
that this was completed while she was being
 examined at the Natural History Museum in Paris.)

The outlines of her biography are spare: Baartman, a member of the Khoikhoi people of southern Africa was born in the late 18th century, displayed in London's Piccadilly Square as "The Hottentot Venus" in 1810, baptized in Manchester in 1811, sold to an animal trainer in Paris in 1814, examined (measured and drawn) by French scientists at the Natural History Museum  in 1815, dissected and dismembered in 1816 (after her death in 1815), displayed (in the form of skeleton and plaster cast) in museums, and buried in South Africa in 2004.

The Dutch called the Khoikhoi people "Hottentot," and Sara's name "Hottentot Venus" was meant to suggest hers was the ideal Khoikhoi woman's body. For Europeans, however, the ideal Khoikhoi woman's body was a spectacle and monstrosity with its large buttocks and purported animal-like genitalia. As Yvette Abrahams, a member of South Africa's Gender Equality Commission, said in the film, scientific racism was built on the body of Sara Baartman when the French scientists examined Baartman to determine if she was human.

I showed The Life and Times of Sara Baartman in both my visual anthropology course and my introduction to cultural anthropology course. (And I'll almost certainly show it in the museum anthropology course I am scheduled to teach in the spring.) Through the film you get a very good picture of the intersection of colonization, race, and natural science in the early 19th century, and that picture provides an excellent springboard for a discussion on the emergence of anthropology as an academic discipline.

Baartman's story of exploitation is not very different from other so-called primitive peoples.

Consider the story of Minik Wallace.


Minik in New York 1897. Source: Wikimedia Commons

Minik was a member of the Inughuit people of northern Greenland and was brought to the United States when he was about seven years old along with his father Qisuk and four other Inughuit in 1897 by the American explorer Robert E. Perry. Although they were not subjected to the sort of freak show display as Baartman had been at London's Piccadilly, they were briefly displayed at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH).

The AMNH served as their custodian, and upon the death of four of the Inughuit (including Minik's father) from tuberculosis soon after their arrival in the US, Minik was adopted by curator William Wallace. A burial was staged for Minik's benefit, but Qisuk's body, like Sara Baartman's 100 years earlier, was considered too important as scientific material to be buried. Qisuk's body was "defleshed" so that the AMNH researchers could study his skeleton. The skeleton was then put on display and eventually Minik discovered the remains were those of his father. He sought to have the skeleton released so that it could be properly buried, but he was not successful.

Minik remained in New York until about 1910 when he returned to Greenland for about six years and attempted to be reintegrated into the Inughuit community. He returned to New York in 1916 and he died in 1918 during the influenza pandemic.

In the 1990s efforts, led by Kenn Harper, resulted in the AMNH's release of the skeletons, and they were returned to Greenland where they were buried.

There are also Ota Benga, the Mbuti man displayed at the Bronx Zoo in the early twentieth century, and Ishi, the last member of the Yahi whose brain was part of the Smithsonian Institution's collection.

Check out artist Fred Wilson's work titled "Ota Benga" here and also here.


References:

  • Engstfeld, Axel. 2005. Minik: The Lost Eskimo. American Experience Series. Boston: WGBH Educational Foundation. 60 min.
  • Green, Rayna. 1992. Ishi: The Last Yahi. American Experience Series. Boston: WGBH Educational Foundation. 57 min.
  • Maseko, Zola. 1998. The Life and Times of Sara Baartman. Brooklyn: Icarus Films. 53 min.
  • Scheper-Hughes, Nancy. 2004.  "Ishi's Brains, Ishi's Ashes: Anthropology and Genocide." In Violence in War and Peace: An Anthology. Edited by Nancy Scheper Hughes and Philippe Bourgois. Oxford: Blackwell. 61–68.


Friday, September 9, 2011

We Look As They Hide

When planning a course, you select readings for a multitude of reasons and sometimes it is not always for a reading's primary contribution to a subject. Such was the case with assigning "The Photograph as an Intersection of Gazes: The Example of National Geographic" by Catherine Lutz and Jane Collins as the very first reading in my visual anthropology course.

They identify and define seven distinct gazes at play in a photograph: 1) the photographer's gaze; 2) the magazine's gaze; 3) the reader's gaze; 4) the non-Western subject's gaze; 5) the direct Western gaze; 6) the refracted gaze; and 7) the academic spectator. Their delineation of each of these gazes provides us with a shared vocabulary and an excellent framework for discussion and evaluation of images -- especially useful for students who have not studied photography or other forms of representation. But that's not why I assigned this article.

What Lutz and Collins do is make us aware of ourselves as viewers of images. They challenge our passivity as viewers.

Theirs is one of those articles that's useful for getting you to slow down and to reconsider a common practice -- in their case, looking at photographs in a popular magazine. (Well, it's a little more complicated than "looking at photographs in a popular magazine" because National Geographic is not an ordinary popular magazine with its depictions of non-Western people and marginalized Western people.) They write, "The photograph and the non-western person share two fundamental attributes in the culturally tutored experience of most Americans: they are objects at which we look" (364). It's striking just how obvious this is in the some of the magazine's cover images cited in the article.

(top (left to right): November 1979, October 1985, August 1987, October 1987; 
bottom: November 1987, July 1988, February 1991, December 1991)

We look as they hide. And we keep looking because we want to discover what is hidden, what is behind the covered faced, the partially closed eyes, the magazine's cover. Lutz and Collins make me aware of my prying eyes. I can no longer simply look at the magazine's cover. I see myself looking.

I wonder about the implications of the assertion that both photographs and non-Western people are "objects at which we look." How can one use photography or film without transforming subjects (non-Western and Western alike) into objects? Do we avoid this subject-to-object transformation in the process of making the images or in the act of viewing images? Or, must we avoid this transformation both in the making and in the viewing of images?

If there's an easy answer, I certainly do not have it. But what seems vitally important to me after reading Lutz and Collins is the cultivation of active viewing.


Lutz, Catherine, and Jane Collins. 1994. The Photograph as an Intersection of Gazes:  The Example of National Geographic.” In Visualizing Theory: Selected Essays from V.A.R. 1990-1994. Edited by Lucien Taylor. New York: Routledge.  Pp. 363-384.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Visual Anthropology at Ball State University

In less than a week I'll begin teaching visual anthropology at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana. As far as I know, BSU's anthropology department has never offered a course in visual anthropology. My plan for this blog, at least initially, is simply to write about my experiences teaching the course.

So, a little about this course.

It's a dual-level undergraduate-graduate course so I am anticipating most students will be have some background in anthropology. I am hoping also that the course has attracted a few students from the College of Communication, Information, and Media. The course is a hybrid: part critical history of ethnographic film, part hands-on film-making. Each week we'll have two days lecture/discussion of readings and one day lab. Students will keep journals about course readings and films. Working in groups, they will make a short (3-5 minute) ethnographic film. And individually they will be blogging about their film-making process. Stay tuned to learn more.

In designing the course I've exploited the expertise of friend and former colleague Steven Rousso-Schindler, ethnographic filmmaker and assistant professor of anthropology at Cal State, Long Beach.