Towards a Photography of Austerity - Disphotic
▻http://www.disphotic.com/towards-a-photography-of-austerity
More than six years on from the start of recession, Britain remains mired in what feels like a state of perpetual austerity. Cuts to essential state services like healthcare and welfare are rampant and ongoing, and the poor, sick, elderly, and ‘other’ are routinely wheeled out as scapegoats for problems they have little to do with causing or exacerbating. Whether austerity in Britain is in any sense economically necessary is still a matter of considerable debate (there are have been some compelling arguments that many of the relatively small welfare savings made through it just generate greater costs elsewhere, for example in the prison system). Many, myself included, would argue that it’s motivated at least as much by politics and ideology, particularly the incumbent conservative government’s traditional hostility to statism, and their generally rather Victorian ideas about work, welfare and morality.
Several interlinked questions have been weighing on my mind since an interesting exchange on this topic at the end of last year. Given that this campaign of austerity is one of the biggest single issues to affect this country and its people in a decade or more, and considering that it’s effect are likely to be very long lasting, what is being done right now to record it? Can we speak of a photography of austerity? What form might such a photography take, and what might it achieve?
Jim Mortram : ▻http://smalltowninertia.co.uk
Hannah Mornement : ▻http://www.hannahmornement.com/galleries/documentary/food-bank-britain
▻http://www.edwardthompson.co.uk/occupy.html
Marc Curran : ►http://www.photomonitor.co.uk/2013/10/the-market-3
▻http://simoncroberts.com/work/let-this-be-a-sign-2
▻http://www.disphotic.com/use-photographs-weapons-value-photomontage
▻http://www.documentscotland.com
#photographie #engagement #austérité #photographes #Grande_Bretagne #appel_à