What remains of Abu Ghraib?: digital photography and cultural memory

TitleWhat remains of Abu Ghraib?: digital photography and cultural memory
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsJoey Brooke Jakob
JournalVisual Studies
Volume31
Issue1
Pagination22-33
ISSN1472586X
Abstract

Ten years on, the photographs from the US-operated Iraqi prison Abu Ghraib have become synonymous with the war on terror for highlighting an unseemly combat culture. This article focuses on the ongoing functions of these viral photos as objects of cultural memory and also highlights their use as war trophies. Drawing on theories of digital photography, emotional and gestural communication, visual semiotics, and cultural memory, this article examines six of the circulated images. Focusing on the symbolic, the visual contents of the photos are contrasted with the rhetorical account from criminal investigator Brent Pack in the documentary Standard Operating Procedure. While Pack concludes that these images are in fact abusive, he nevertheless dismisses the relevancy of the emoting individuals within the photographs. The arguments here take a particular shape: the pictorial display of emotion is not only relevant, but is essential to the communication of group identity and the perpetuation of cultural memory, which is reinforced by the role that digital photographic technology plays in aiding the circulation of this cultural memory.

DOI10.1080/1472586X.2015.1128844
Short TitleWhat remains of Abu Ghraib?