sparrow6224
Well-known
I still get this queasy feeling reading it. Call me a cynic or blame it in having read 'Tin-Tin in Congo' at a tender age. I could be wrong of course.
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Well if you're up on Tin Tin au Congo I should just rest my case and sit down.
HOWEVER.... are you aware of this important turn of events? http://www.france24.com/en/20121206-tintin-congo-not-racist-belgian-court-rules
I'm a big Tin Tin fan, so of course it stands to reason I'd be on the wrong side here (I also believe Heart of Darkness is one of the great novels in English, and not "racist" though I don't yet have the support of the Belgian courts on that. I also love T. S. Eliot god help me....) Tin Tin au Tibet might show you that the boy redeemed himself, racially and post-Colonially, if you have the time....
This is a long and complex and to me very important argument and you are extremely good at presenting your end of it. I admire your prose a great deal, and your expertise. So we'll have to hash it out someday with the books in front of us and wi-fi available, face to face. But a few points:
First of all that is not the only quote (as I remember it) from Frank in the Galassi catalogue but I'll have to go over it later.
Second, it is not Cartier-Bresson's responsibility as an artist to be friendly, or even to wish to help people in distress whose picture he might take. Susan Sontag would never require this of another artist, this political commitment outside the boundaries of the work -- of a writer? a painter? Never. Photography stirs this deep resentment in people, it's odd -- as if when you take people's photographs you owe them something. But if I were to chat with a person and then use some gesture, language, the entire incident perhaps in a novel or a story, would I owe him anything?
I think to keep the matter short I'd just say that I find many later photographs of Cartier Bresson's that are directly and deeply human. His portraits of Camus, of Ghandi, of several others -- including the most human and touching portrait I ever saw of Marilyn Monroe -- show his humanity but that of course is not the realm of humanity that Frank and Sontag have in mind (Sontag, that is, going by our description -- I have the bloody book I should read it -- my problem is that much of the time she doesn't so much make a point as do a dramatic representation of making a point, an imitation in full costume....). A quick search of the web leads me to this. I love the faces....
