Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Open Wound: Chechnya 1994-2003 (Hardcover)


Customers who bought this item also bought
A Small Corner of Hell : Dispatches from Chechnya by Anna Politkovskaya
Chechnya Diary: A War Correspondent's Story of Surviving the War in Chechnya by Thomas Goltz
Chechnya: To the Heart of a Conflict by Andrew Meier
The Lone Wolf And the Bear: Three Centuries of Chechen Defiance of Russian Rule by Moshe Gammer
Chechnya : Life in a War-Torn Society (California Series in Public Anthropology) by Valery Tishkov

Book Description
The collapse of Russian communism in 1991 resounded to the shudder of an empire. Soviet imperialism and empiricism was dead and lands, nations and peoples would henceforth be free from the tyranny of the communist diktat. But it also sounded the death knell of a small, impoverished, forgotten land-locked state in the Caucasus which had the misfortune to be of geopolitical importance.

Chechnya re-iterated its largely Muslim claim to independence from Russia, one they had first made 150 years before. Then, of course, they had no knowledge of the importance of oil; they were peasants hurling clods against the cavalry of Imperialist Russia. They do now. A blitzkrieg was launched against the Chechens in 1994, so devastating as to reduce Grozny, the capital, to a city of rubble and rats, the Dresden of the Caucasus. There followed the systematic rape and murder of the people – men, women and children – by the Spetznatz, the Russian special forces.
But the Chechens would not die. What is left in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, is a vision of hell in the eyes of the survivors - pictured by Stanley Greene - that seems impossible to contemplate. The horrific politics of Yeltsin and Putin are reasonably comprehensible, given their roles. But what do the mothers of the Russian soldiers who have done this to Chechnya feel now about their sons?

Stanley Greene’s photographs in Open Wound are so powerful as to make these our responsibilities. He is unashamed to use guilt, with his painter’s eye, to relate the deeds of men in Chechnya to our own conduct.

About the Author
Stanley Greene was born in New York in 1949. Twenty years later he picked up a camera. By 1994 he had found himself in Chechnya, in the Caucasus, amid the systematic extermination of a people and their country. In Open Wound he has shown the story of the Chechen rebellion through his eyes, necessarily clouded by one man’s love for another. He lives in Paris.

Hardcover: 220 pages
Publisher: Trolley (October 29, 2003)
Language: English
ISBN: 1904563015


No comments: