Killing for Culture: From Edison to ISIS: A New History of Death on Film Paperback – May 1, 2016

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Management number 220508259 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price $8.40 Model Number 220508259
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"I thought I was desensitized. I'm not. No hope for humanity... I feel like my quest is over." -- Comment posted online in reaction to the video, 3 Guys 1 Hammer. Unlike images of sex, which were clandestine and screened only in private, images of death were made public from the onset of cinema. The father of the modern age, Thomas Edison, fed the appetite for this material with staged executions on film. Little over a century later the executions are real and the world is aghast at brutalities freely available online at the click of a button. Some of these films are created by lone individuals using shaky camera phones: Luka Magnotta, for instance, and the teenagers known as the Dnipropetrovsk maniacs. Others are shot on high definition equipment and professionally edited by organized groups, such as the militant extremists ISIS. KILLING FOR CULTURE explores these images of death and violence, and the human obsession with looking – and not looking – at them. Beginning with the mythology of the so-called 'snuff' film and its evolution through popular culture, this book traces death and the artifice of death in the 'mondo' documentaries that emerged in the 1960s, and later the faux snuff pornography that found an audience through Necrobabes and similar websites. However, it is when videos depicting the murders of Daniel Pearl and Nick Berg surfaced in the 2000s that an era of genuine atrocity commenced, one that has irrevocably changed the way in which we function as a society. Read more

ISBN10 1909394343
ISBN13 978-1909394346
Language English
Publisher Headpress
Dimensions 6 x 1.5 x 9 inches
Item Weight 2.08 pounds
Print length 646 pages
Publication date May 1, 2016

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