This is War

Regular price €63.99
Quantity:
In stock with our UK publisher. 14-28 days
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
14 days return policy Shipping & Delivery
30-year career
A01=Corinne Dufka
A23=Jon Lee Anderson
Africa
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Atrocities
Author_Corinne Dufka
automatic-update
black and white
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AJB
Category=AJCD
Category=JW
collection
COP=United States
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
doctrines
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
female conflict
globalism
government
Holocaust
Human
Human Rights Watch
humanitarianism
ideologies and
International Human
International Justice
Jon Lee Anderson
Language_English
Latin America
Machur Fellow
military
monograph
PA=Available
photographer
Photography
photography history
photojournalism
politics
Price_€50 to €100
PS=Active
Pulitzer prize
Reuters
Rights
softlaunch
The New Yorker
War Crimes

Product details

  • ISBN 9780986250033
  • Dimensions: 254 x 215mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Nov 2023
  • Publisher: Glitterati Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
Secure checkout Fast Shipping Easy returns

“There are photographs in this book that will stay in the hearts and minds of the people who view them, and who, like Corinne Dufka, will resolve to make it their life’s purpose to do what they can to help stop war.” — Jon Lee Anderson, staff writer, The New Yorker

 

This is War presents a tour de force of one of most celebrated women war photographers of her generation. From 1988 to 1999, Capa Gold Medal winner and Pulitzer Prize–nominated photographer Corinne Dufka covered some of the bloodiest conflicts of the late twentieth century. The devastatingly powerful and intimate images in this book chart revolutions and coups, separatist movements, and mass atrocities across nine different countries on three continents. 

Starting in El Salvador during the Cold War, This Is War moves onto Bosnia, and then Africa, where Dufka reported on the Rwandan genocide and conflicts in South Sudan, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Burundi, Ethiopia, and the Congo. Her photographs are as brutal as they are tender, as mournful as they are meaningful, and are, above all, a testament to the profound toll conflict leaves in its wake. Her images interrogate abuse of power, celebrate defiance, and seek out the humanity of civilians and combatants who lives were torn apart by war.   

More than just a documentary, This is War is an extraordinary photographic record of war and personal enlightenment. It adds to the historical record of many under-covered conflicts and of the role of women in photojournalism, and urges the viewer to interrogate why conflict in many countries covered in the book, persist to this day.   

After leaving photojournalism, Dufka went on to a career as a war crimes investigator, for which she was, in 2003, awarded a MacArthur Fellowship.  In her introduction to This is War, she notes: “These images beseech us to work harder to honor those who have perished and protect the rest of us from humanity’s worst, most abject failure: its capacity for war.”

Corinne Dufka grew up in the Utah and California, and attended university in the San Francisco Bay area, earning bachelor and master’s degrees in social work. Dufka worked as a psychiatric social worker in San Francisco before moving to El Salvador in 1986 where she began taking pictures to illustrate the work of the Lutheran Church, for whom she was working.  She launched her photojournalism career at age 30 and went on to cover over a dozen armed conflicts in Central America, Bosnia, and Africa. At the top of her game and having been honored with the Robert Capa Gold Medal Award, a World Press Photo Award for spot news, the International Women’s Media Foundation’s Courage in Journalism Award, and a Pulitzer finalist citation, she left Reuters, and photojournalism, to join Human Rights Watch as a researcher and advocate. She worked with HRW for over 20 years, most of it whilst based in Africa, during which she documented and exposed war crimes perpetrated by armed groups in Sierra Leone, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso and Cote d’Ivoire among others. While at HRW, she was awarded the MacArthur Fellowship Award for her work. Dufka now resides in Maryland.

More from this author