Exit Wounds: The Myth of Return
Photographer Jim Lommasson has compiled a series of photographs and interviews with American veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars. The soldiers speak the truth about war, their participation, and the effects on themselves and those caught in the crossfire. Thie exhibit examines and raises questions about a generation of soldiers largely invisible to the American public. The stories are profound and timeless. Returning soldiers have always had to process the real and transformative traumas of battle while integrating into a new civilian culture that lacks the clarity, meaning, and sense of ‘mission’ that war can provide. But how will these returning ‘silent warriors’ shape the social fabric into which they must now incorporate? With bodies and minds completely attuned to the violence and exigencies of war, what is the psychic space these young veterans inhabit after their tours? What happens when battle-bred virtues, such as a heroic disregard for one’s life and pain, become a liability or even contemptible in their new home? Exit Wounds looks at some of the trials of reintegration for this generation of invisible warriors and asks whether they do in fact get to ‘come home.’
Exit Wounds is now a traveling exhibition. A book to follow.
Friday, March 20, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Hey Jim,
ReplyDeleteWelcome to the world of blogging! I'm new to it myself just having started last month. Looking forward to seeing your photos. You may already know that all images on blogspot are stored in the Picasa Web Albums and that you can post as many pictures and photo albums as you like.
Helen just started a blog herself and now is following your blog.