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Limits of the Visible

Limits of the Visible

Luke Gibbons

About this book

The absence of photographs of the Irish Famine has been attributed to the shorcomings of a medium then in its infancy, but it may also be due to certain limitations in the visible itself. Susan Sontag argued that images can evoke sentimental responses but cannot address wider political questions of obligation and justice. In this essay, Luke Gibbons revisits representations of the Famine, particularly those in Ireland's Great Hunger Museum to argue that images can not only give visual pleasure but demand ethical interventions on the part of spectators. This fusing of sympathy and affective response with the right of redress is conveyed by a 'judicious obscurity,' a determination not to show all, which places an obligation on the spectator to complete what is beyond representation, or what is left to the imagination. --Page [4] of cover.

Details

OL Work ID
OL21569234W

Subjects

FaminesIreland, history, famine, 1845-1852HistoryStarvationArtHistory, 19th CenturyHuman MigrationSocial ConditionsFamines in artHunger in artFamine (Ireland : 1845-1852) fast (OCoLC)fst01353092Famine (Ireland : 1845-1852) fast (uri) http://id.worldcat.org/fast/fst01353092

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.