Description
When Baghdad exploded under bombs, television chose
to bring us fireworks. But does this distant and spectacular image tell
us what is really happening on the ground, how it feels or what it
means? Television has the means to take us anywhere and show us
anything. It can bring us the physical experience of war with all its’
horrors, like no other medium, and yet the image of American war on
television is disembodied, bloodless, and unreal. The invasion of Iraq
was the most closely documented war ever fought. Lasting only 800 hours,
it produced 20,000 hours of video, but those images were tightly
controlled, producing a monolithic view of combat sanitized and
controlled by the Pentagon.
Enemy Image traces the
ways us television has covered war, starting with Vietnam in the 1960s
and shows how the military has devised ever-improving means of ensuring
the American public never again has the real face of combat beamed
directly into their living rooms. Comparing footage of Vietnam,
including rarely-seen material shot in North Vietnam, to coverage of
Iraq and using extensive interviews with veteran war correspondents and
news anchors, Mark Daniels demonstrates how television that once
revealed the truth is now increasingly used to hide it.
Tags
Mark Daniels, enemy image, baghdad, iraq, bomb, fireworks, war, horror, american, bloodless, unreal, television, pentagon, combat, vietnam, 1960s, military, north, documentary, watch, online, free, film, download