Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/08/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 8/28/00 9:24:38 PM Eastern Daylight Time, palio@miata.net writes: << standing by and watching, even more profiting from it, is a very destructive thing to have done. >> Ethics are an integral part of every profession. If the purpose were to expose, particularly if on a non-profit basis, a problem hidden generally from the public and requiring public notice in order to generate a constructive or remedial response, then the photographer would be a crusading journalist rather than a voyeur. As noted, in order to have such an effect, such photography must be sensitive, sympathetic and generally of the highest calibre. Anything less is at risk of looking more like a "snuff" film than the work of W. Eugene Smith. Susan Sontag wrote an interesting treatise in 1973, entitled "On Photography", which consists of a number of essays on related themes centering on photographic ethics. Rather than paraphrase, I will stop at suggesting the book's relevance to the subject at hand. As to the photographs in question, I believe it would be fair to suggest that they were not evidently taken for publication but only as an academic exercise. They appear to serve that purpose at least adequately. Further, in light of the writer's analysis of the underlying behavioral aberration, it would be appropriate if not necessary to consider what, if any, form of intervention might be called for, as to the subject herself. Of course, that inquiry most likely leads to a number of ethical questions, both for the photographer and the mental health professional. Joe Sobel