ARMS
AGAINST FURY:
MAGNUM PHOTOGRAPHERS IN AFGHANISTAN
Robert Dannin
8.5" x 11.25", 226 pages
200 four-color and duotone photographs
2002, powerHouse Books
"Arms
Against Fury examines the dramatic struggle of the Afghan
people through the lens of Magnum photographers, dating back to
co-founder George Rodger's documentation of the country's role
in World War II. Ever since, Magnum's intrepid photographers have
crisscrossed the country's striking landscape from the Central
Asian steppes to the parched southern desert by way of the Hindu
Kush mountains surrounding Kabul and the adjacent Panjshir Valley.
As
early as the 1950s, Eve Arnold and Marc Riboud filed unprecendented
stories from a legendary Shangri-la, showing a small kingdom struggling
for statehood against the forces of underdevelopment and unfortunate
geographic position during the Cold War. The ultimate overthrow
of the monarchy and brutal liquidation of Afghanistan's consitutional
government in 1978 heralded the arrival of Soviet-style communism.
Peasants in Nuristan rebelled immediately and initiated a jihad
that was covered first by Raymond Depardon and then by Stever
McCurry, and later by renowned photojournalist Abbas, who also
focused on the progress of the jihad, which eventually faced a
massive Red Army invasion and savage aerial bombardments.
The
victory against the Soviets also signaled the beginning of a civil
war that began in 1992. Documented by Luc Delahaye, Christopher
Steele-Perkins, Abbas, and Stever McCurry, Afghan militias destroyed
large swathes of Kabul. The Taliban militia subdued warring factions
in 1996 and proclaimed an Islamic emirate. Steele-Perkins was
one of the few journalists to report from Afghanistan during this
period of theocratic tyranny. In the wake of the September 11
attacks on the United States, the hated Taliban were shaken from
power by a loose alliance of mujahidin backed by American forces.
Yet nothing seemed to remedy the miserable spectacle of a ruined
country littered with ten million land mines and thousands of
innocent victims of the hi-tech war on terror.
The
future of Afghanistan, as depicted by Abbas, Eve Arnold, Luc Delahaye,
Thomas Dworzak, Alex Majoli, Steve McCurry, and Francesco Zizola,
remains uncertain at best.
Containing
additional photographic work by Ian Berry, Elliott Erwitt, Stuart
Franklin, Philip Jones Griffiths, Susan Meiselas, and Wayne Miller,
commentary by the photographers, and several illustrated essays,
Arms Against Fury will become an indispensable reference for documentary
studies, social history, and critical photography." - publisher
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