In 2018, the VII Foundation asked more than a dozen renowned reporters and photojournalists to revisit countries with which they had become achingly familiar during times of brutal conflict. The task was to see peace through the prism of their journalistic experience; to survey familiar towns and villages; to reconnect with women, men, soldiers, civilians, statesmen, and students who had survived the conflict or grown up in the postwar society; to discover what the lived experience of “peace” feels like. To augment this reportage, the VII Foundation sought input from academics and peacemakers. And they invited citizens of those countries to give their very personal narratives, in their own voices. Hard edges were not softened nor unpalatable impressions deleted. They wanted to show the truth as seen and experienced by those that lived and those that reported on seemingly intractable civil wars in Bosnia and Herzegovina Cambodia, Colombia, Lebanon, Northern Ireland, and Rwanda. The result is Imagine: Reflections on Peace - a curation of searing images and trenchant essays that show both micro and macro views of peace, with its uneven degrees of economic success, political stability, and social harmony. In this stunning collection, worldrenown journalists and authors take us into societies that have suffered searing conflict - and survived. Photographic essays make the stakes during war and peace grippingly palpable. Compelling backstories about negotiations, tales of survival, and accounts of the search for inner peace make the big picture personal. Imagine offers a rare glimpse into the unvarnished story of peace, a window into what it takes for societies and individuals to move forward after unspeakable brutality.
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ABOUT THE EDITORS:
Gary Knight is co-founder and principle architect of the VII Photo Agency, co-founder of the VII Foundation and founder of the VII Academy. He is also a member of the Board of Trustees of the Frontline Club, London; co-founder of The GroundTruth Project, Boston; founding Director of the Program for Narrative & Documentary Practice at the Institute for Global Leadership at Tufts University; twice Chair and President of the World Press Photo Award; was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 2009, a Logan Non Fiction Fellow at the Carey Institute in 2017, and an acclaimed photographer.
Constance Hale is an award-winning writer, editor, and author of six books, including “Wired Style” and “Sin and Syntax.”
Fiona Turner is an Emmy award winning broadcast journalist, producer, and doc-umentarian. Her first full-length documentary film, “Eat Up,” was released in 2019.
Ron Haviv is a co-founder of the VII photo agency and the VII Foundation. He has won multiple awards for his photojournalism.
This book explores the conditions and consequences of peace processes in Lebanon, Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Rwanda, Cambodia, and Colombia. Leading photographers and writers of war returned to those countries where they first reported during conflict. Analysts, lawyers, negotiators and writers who lived through war and peace added their voices to the project. All together they examine what lessons can be learned from the peace that was brokered in these nations, how peace has endured over time, and in the hope that one hundred years after the failed peace accord of Versailles, future generations will understand how the failures and successes of the past can be used to build a peace that will endure in the future.
Since the end of the Cold War, a handful of nations have managed to move beyond what seemed like intractable civil wars to states of somewhat stable peace. Different conditions have allowed Bosnia & Herzegovina, Cambodia, Colombia, Lebanon, Northern Ireland, and Rwanda to transform themselves, and each society relies on its own set of principles and processes to ''feed'' the peace.
The Peace Project has been conceived as an exploration of how such nations have achieved peace and how they are maintaining it. The project looks in particular at the concepts of truth, reconciliation, justice, and forgiveness. It also examinesthe parts that civic society plays in making peace and how, once won, governments and politicians drive peace forward. It looks at gender, asking whether men and women make and maintain peace differently. So as to better understand these societies and to offer ideas on how peace might be fed elsewhere, the VII Foundation has asked writers and photojournalists, each familiar with the pervasive conflict in the countries they focus on, to return and re-examine the post-conflict arena.
Each photographer has a venerable body of work from the conflict period and has submitted historical images for the project. He or she produced original work from these regions today. For some of the photographers, this marks an emtional return to a story after decades away. For others, it is an opportunity to curate their life's work, as a barometer of change as peace has taken hold, come under threat, and taken hold again.
The distinguished writers the VII Foundation have chosen made their careers covering the respective region and have continued to follow developments. Their long-time personal understanding of the political and social forces at play, coupled with their enduring relationships with people in the country, give their essays special insight, as well as literary value.
Citizens who lived through the transition from war to peace will offer first-hand accounts, adding local voices and insights.
In addition to reportage, the book includes a series of essays on the core issues that accompany a country through the transition from war to peace. These essays frame our exploration and will include analyses by leading commentators from the fields of law, politics and government, negotiation, reconciliation, and social justice.
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Zustand: New. Photographic essays take us into societies that have suffered searing conflict - and survived.KlappentextPhotographic essays take us into societies that have suffered searing conflict ? and survived. Artikel-Nr. 396332158
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Buch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - When it is so easy to imagine peace, why is it so difficult to implement it That's the question Imagine asks: thinking about peace. After covering the biggest conflicts, Gary Knight, a British photographer, had an idea: to publish a book on peace. A daring approach. On the menu: interviews with former warlords, testimonies of those who, after the horror, have taken the gamble of reconstruction, and photos that are simply breathtaking. Artikel-Nr. 9782490952090
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