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240 pages, Kindle Edition
First published August 17, 2021
The scenes of the Jan. 6 insurrection are burned into the minds of many Americans. “Image Control” discusses in depth about how terrible things are sensationalized. Pictures are repeatedly shown to us of refugees clinging to planes in Afghanistan, of fascists breaking into the Senate Chambers, of children starving and of homelessness right in our neighborhoods. “Fascism trades in death,” Nathan says, and these images of horrors should never be stripped from that context.
Images don’t solely serve to remind us, but they also distract us. Nathan talks about memes and how the use of pictures and incomplete text together can create relatable and funny scenarios for our friends and observers. When I post a photo of a raccoon leaning out the driver’s side window with watery eyes and caption it “me in the drive-thru when the barista asks how my day is going,” that sentence is incomplete. Even without saying it, the context is “I am having a bad day and a small act of kindness is enough to make me emotional.” I agree with Nathan that this continual manipulation of imagery is a fascinating form of communication.