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August 31, 2007

How Pulitzer photo affected history: good and bad

The 1994 Pulitzer Prize photo by Paul Watson (see previous entry) was published widely by the Associated Press, and Time magazine ran a version of the photo that was digitally altered (to reduce the shock). That image is credited for shocking the US public into such a state of outrage that the Clinton administration began almost immediate withdrawl from Somalia. However, the photographer believes that the political sting created by that photograph became responsible, however indirectly, with Clinton's refusal to intervene in Rwanda, despite very different political and humanitarian situations. The powerful photograph affected positive change, but also prevented much needed action in another situation — for fear of a similar kind of photograph surfacing from Rwanda. You can hear how heavy the guilt weighs on the photographer as he talks in the interview.

Posted by jimcasper on August 31, 2007 08:52 AM |

Comments

I listened to the interview with Paul Watson, which I learned about from this blog. I feel sorry that Mr. Watson continues to be tormented by doubt over his decision to take the Mogadishu photograph. In a situation such as his at that moment, there is not time to reflect at length; to decide afterwards to release the image is another matter, but I believe he acted both correctly and courageously in doing that. He was aware that the photograph would be, at the least, controversial.

But no photographer, no writer, no painter -- no artist and no reporter -- can be responsible for all the repercussions of a creative act. An act that stirs no waves is one of dubious value; photos of cute puppies have their place in the world, and so do light-hearted humorous essays. But so have incendiary photos, articles, and speeches. Without them much momentous change for the good would likely not have taken place; and by their very nature they carry hazard for their creators.

I don't believe Mr. Watson should be held responsible, by himself or anybody else, for failure of a government to condemn atrocities. If a government or its leaders hesitate to speak out against evil because they fear representation of the truth -- then it is that government and those leaders who bear the burden of that decision, not somebody who made a difficult moral decision about carrying out an act (releasing the photo) honestly intended to do good, by alerting the consciousness and the conscience of the world to wrongdoing in the way that photography uniquely can do.

Posted by:
Jon Rutherford | September 1, 2007 07:22 AM

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