These are not the practices of state action or global mobilization by state and non-governmental organizations; instead, they are the simple habits of life.
Continue ReadingOn the surface, this doesn't seem to have much to do with Haiti. Nothing is collapsed or broken, and there is no blood, no open wounds or stumps instead of hands or feet, no burning bodies. But then you read the caption: "Alex Alexis collapsed when he learned that...
Continue ReadingLooking at these Jason Andrew photographs, Perhaps the G20 protests are a lot like the establishment after all.
Continue ReadingThe photo appeared on page A8 of the morning edition of the New York Times with this caption: “ Tinderbox In Hebron, a Jewish settler threw wine at a Palestinian woman.... Look at the woman’s coat and hat, and at the Star of David scrawled on the storefront; she...
Continue ReadingAs I checked periodically, the lack of news became increasingly ominous. Where was the plane–or at least the wreckage?
Continue ReadingThe image accompanied a New York Times article in the Sunday Business section of the paper on “How Lehman Got Its Real Estate Fix.” The title and this stunning photo illustration are the only suggestions of addiction in the paper.
Continue ReadingHolocaust In The Furniture Business? I’d understand if you think I’ve got a screw loose. Chairs are not people. Manufactured objects are recycled all the time, but....
Continue ReadingThese photographs were placed on a Facebook page to provide continued documentation of the closing of the Rocky Mountain News. In the days of The Organization Man, the office was thought to be the source of Bob Dylan’s Desolation Row. When you look at the shabby, barren, modernist decor,...
Continue ReadingAlthough the crash explodes in an instant, it was developing well before: when people weren’t paying attention, when merely adequate brakes were installed, or barely adequate regulations enacted.... Emily Dickinson said it best: Ruin is formal — Devil’s work Consecutive and slow – Fail in an instant, no man...
Continue ReadingThis post is a follow-up to one featured yesterday, offering the powerful images of photojournalist John Moore, powerful evidence of this cruel recession, and one family's unwarranted eviction.
Continue ReadingMary Ann Smith collects some belongings after an eviction team removed the furniture from her foreclosed house. This is a scene of personal desolation.
Continue ReadingOval Office replicas are not going to shape history, of course, but historical analogies can shape the way we understand the world and evaluate leadership.
Continue ReadingFaced with another year of violence, journalists and citizens alike have to make choices about how to depict and understand what is happening, and how to do so without becoming cynical or otherwise numbed to the obligations and possibilities for change. One place to begin is by looking at...
Continue ReadingA Congolese government soldier lies dead in the road not long after having been shot in the head. It is easy to immediately think of him as a statistic.
Continue ReadingContinuing our special features here at BNN, we would like to invite you to another edition of the BAGnewsSALON. This on-line real-time discussion, titled 9/11: Looking Back From Now, will be held here Thursday evening 5-6:30 PST, 8 - 9:30 EST.
Continue Readingby Robert Hariman, No Caption Needed Shots of the "free speech zone" set up in a distant back lot of the convention may evoke some sympathy for those protesting at the DNC, but this photo reveals what really is at stake: not much. For all the supposed defiance, you...
Continue Readingby Robert Hariman Kafka’s Trial and Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (for images, go here and here) were once touchstones for understanding the deep anxieties of modern social organization.... Both came to mind recently, and particularly Kafka’s depiction of K, the everyman caught in organizational processes that by turns snare, thwart,...
Continue ReadingThere has been something strange about the recent coverage of the war in Iraq... Guest blogger, Robert Hariman discusses the sense of disengagement emerging from both fronts in the terror war.
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