always click the shutter, help if you can after, but always take the pictures
Surely you've got that the wrong way round!!! It may be too late after you've clicked the shutter.:thumbsdown:
always click the shutter, help if you can after, but always take the pictures
If we bury our heads in tha sand and pretend it never happened change will never come.
Surely you've got that the wrong way round!!! It may be too late after you've clicked the shutter.:thumbsdown:
Surely you've got that the wrong way round!!! It may be too late after you've clicked the shutter.:thumbsdown:
One train of thinking is, that by taking the photo you take another element away from those mourning their loss. To clarify, how would you feel if it where you dead relatives being published to the world?
always click the shutter, help if you can after, but always take the pictures
One train of thinking is, that by taking the photo you take another element away from those mourning their loss. To clarify, how would you feel if it where you dead relatives being published to the world?
Nobody has suggested we do that, thats not even the point of the thread. We can all agree that we need to be aware of world issues, but the question was whether we need to see dead babies in order for us to do it.
For me, i find it hard to see disturbing things like that, thats just my personal, natural, in-voluntary reaction - not a judgement on whether i think its right or not. TBO im not sure if that kind of thing is needed, or whether its just to serve peoples morbid curiosity. I hate seeing things like that, but at the same time i find it hard to resist looking.
All i know is, if someone was in danger and needed help, i'd be at their side before my camera even hits the ground. And anyone else standing there taking photos will find their camera on the floor too.
Adey
Everyone has their own set of morals to live by. don't judge others just because they don't fit your image of what should be.Nobody has suggested we do that, thats not even the point of the thread. We can all agree that we need to be aware of world issues, but the question was whether we need to see dead babies in order for us to do it.
For me, i find it hard to see disturbing things like that, thats just my personal, natural, in-voluntary reaction - not a judgement on whether i think its right or not. TBO im not sure if that kind of thing is needed, or whether its just to serve peoples morbid curiosity. I hate seeing things like that, but at the same time i find it hard to resist looking.
All i know is, if someone was in danger and needed help, i'd be at their side before my camera even hits the ground. And anyone else standing there taking photos will find their camera on the floor too.
Adey
I came across a disturbing picture on the BBC website.
(The gallery I’m talking about is through the BBC website under ‘Day in pictures.’ And the photo in question is under the Indonesian tsunami.
I saw a H&S video at work with that clip in a few months back... was the fact he was just motionless with smoke coming off him that made it so horrific I think
That is the one... reading your message brought flash backs... certainly made me think twice about working on live circuits..
In answer to "Why take the picture at all? Just to show what Tsunamis can do?"
The same could be asked of any news article...
"Why write the words. Just to tell people what Tsunamis can do?"
The answer really is that photography is a way of explaining something...albeit in a visual way.
But wouldnt a picture of a row of small caskets tell us the same thing?
I just think alot of people either have an over active sense of morbid curiosity or are just so cold hearted that photos like that have little or no impact. Like people are so desensitized to death and mutilation these days, deep down i worry because it make me feel like humanity and respect for life (and death) is being lost.
you asked if a row of caskets would say the same thing. thats like asking in education if a diagram of a heart is as effective as disecting the real thing. they both have the same end but one is more effective than the other so no i don't think it tells the story as emotively.
considering most of the people in this thread are of the mind that there is nothing wrong with the photos i would argue that you are just over sensitive to it more than we're the opposite. group intelligence is the most powerful thing and usually the consensus is a good measure of the general feeling across a community so i think it's less morbid curiosity from us and over sensitiveness from you.
But wouldnt a picture of a row of small caskets tell us the same thing?
I just think alot of people either have an over active sense of morbid curiosity or are just so cold hearted that photos like that have little or no impact. Like people are so desensitized to death and mutilation these days, deep down i worry because it make me feel like humanity and respect for life (and death) is being lost.
And the bit about the heart was a bit weak for you though Joe, i've read a number of your posts and your are a smart guy, but that comparison missed a beat with me im afraid![]()
I think the thing with this is surely the thread shows that what you say is actually not the case. I am not sure anyone is looking with a sense of morbid curiosity at the image?
They were dead when the pic was taken, so nothing could be done, so there isn't a question of help first here.
How is this imaging desensitising people? Surely this is a shocking image, which reminds people of the fragility of human life. You obviously see it very differently, but it is not morbid curiosity.
Genuine question, do governments form action plans based on the shockingness of an image. Or does the shock felt by the public seeing the image somehow filter 'up' to the powers that be?