Through the crosshairs : war, visual culture, and the weaponized gaze

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Through the crosshairs : war, visual culture, and the weaponized gaze

Roger Stahl

(War culture)

Rutgers University Press, c2018

  • : pbk

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Through the crosshairs : war, visual culture & the weaponized gaze

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Note

Bibliography: p. 181-199

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Now that it has become so commonplace, we rarely blink an eye at camera footage framed by the crosshairs of a sniper's gun or from the perspective of a descending smart bomb. But how did this weaponized gaze become the norm for depicting war, and how has it influenced public perceptions? Through the Crosshairs traces the genealogy of this weapon's-eye view across a wide range of genres, including news reports, military public relations images, action movies, video games, and social media posts. As he tracks how gun-camera footage has spilled from the battlefield onto the screens of everyday civilian life, Roger Stahl exposes how this raw video is carefully curated and edited to promote identification with military weaponry, rather than with the targeted victims. He reveals how the weaponized gaze is not only a powerful propagandistic frame, but also a prime site of struggle over the representation of state violence.

Table of Contents

1 A Strike of the Eye 2 Smart Bomb Vision 3 Satellite Vision 4 Drone Vision 5 Sniper Vision 6 Resistant Vision 7 Afterword: Bodies Inhabited and Disavowed Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index

by "Nielsen BookData"

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