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Being an Ethical PhotographerWe see images of victims of war and starvation so regularly they become acceptable to us. We are so used to them that we stop asking why people are in this state and we certainly forget that someone’s gone there and made those images, in a certain way, for a certain reason. So why would anybody really want to photograph this horror? |
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14 June 2001
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There are so many issues here that working photographers are usually the last to comment on their work. I can only really speak about my work, and I hope that this may help. There is an inherent problem with this type of reporting. What are we there FOR exactly? Are we there to “show the world” and try to change it? Are we there simply to report as objective onlookers? Or are we there to boost our own egos and look heroic?. I have photographed quite a bit of conflict in the last decade – wars, coups and other unpleasant situations. However, my experience in Sudan meant that I didn’t cover the earthquake in India in 2001 even though I was working in the country at the time. I felt that I simply had nothing to say about it that would be useful. That’s now my benchmark. Let me explain. SudanI first went to Sudan because of a chance remark. Clare Short, a British government minister, had quipped that what was happening in South Sudan was “a hunger gap, between two harvests”. My aid agency contacts knew this to be false and that that statement would have a direct impact on donation. At the same time, I had been asked to make an essay on the topic of “food” for the World Press Masterclass. I had been for a long time interested in the politics of food and hunger and so went out to do the story. I also took an assignment for Channel 4 news – the idea was that they’d rostrum my stills and I’d shoot pieces to camera in the field/ambient noise. It worked very well. Despite the horrific nature of what was there, I feel I did a good job. I got the message out. What struck me, however, was how absolutely useless the camera is in such situations. It cannot save a single life that is in front of you. I lost count of how many people tried to give me their babies because I was white and they thought I was a doctor. I also cannot describe the trauma that I felt watching so many die.
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