Skip to main content

4 March 2021 - 4 March 2021

12:30PM - 2:00PM

Zoom online

Share page:

Dr Beatriz Pichel from the Photographic History Research Centre (PHRC), De Montfort University, will be speaking to us about her forthcoming book Picturing the Western Front: Photography, Practices and Experiences in First World War France, out in May from Manchester University Press.

This is the image alt text

Department of History Building

Between 1914 and 1918, military, press and amateur photographers produced thousands of pictures. Either classified in military archives specially created with this purpose in 1915, collected in personal albums or circulated in illustrated magazines, photographs were supposed to tell the story of the war. Picturing the Western Front argues that photographic practices also shaped combatants and civilians' war experiences. Doing photography (taking pictures, posing for them, exhibiting, cataloguing and looking at them) allowed combatants and civilians to make sense of what they were living through. Photography mattered because it enabled combatants and civilians to record events, establish or reinforce bonds with one another, represent bodies, place people and events in imaginative geographies and making things visible, while making others, such as suicide, invisible. Photographic practices became, thus, frames of experience.

Pricing

Free to attend