19 Comments
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Marie Soffe's avatar

New reader here! The photographs are stunning and you give much food for thought and further learning. Thank you 🙏

Neil Scott's avatar

Hi Maria! Great to have you here

Marie Soffe's avatar

Thank you! My pleasure.

William Hayward's avatar

Another great photographer I foolishly knew nothing about, thank you for new knowledge!

Neil Scott's avatar

Thank you! this is all a journey of discovery for me too!

SilverPerceptions's avatar

Thanks for this. I didn't know anything about Vishniac but I've orderd a copy of A Vanished World and it'll be great to have this context as I look through it.

Neil Scott's avatar

You're welcome! Great to hear. A friend told me they'd done exactly the same thing and ordered a copy. Curious to hear what you think!

Andrew Eberlin's avatar

Fascinating read, Neil, about a photographer who I know very little about and will now go and discover more.

Neil Scott's avatar

A photographer friend instantly ordered A Vanished World for the same reason. Glad to hear! Thank you.

Nicolas Sutro's avatar

Hey man, this is an interesting, and subtle, discussion. I think you bring out the ambiguity of being a European Jew during the periods you discuss with nuance; and your point about Vishniac as not exactly myth maker…but then artist with a particular (always touching, always respectful) of his subjects. It is true that many people did not live in the shtetl, indeed led affluent bourgeois lives (but frequently with the fear and reality of antisemitism looking over their shoulders), but - maybe because of their status - had a real anxiety and fear of the shtetl, I think because the gains of emancipation were so hard won and so fragile that there was a worry about that being taken away and the return to the shtetl. And the Schnitzler quote is perceptive.

I’m not sure I’d agree all the way with Caddihy and the ‘yid’ to ‘id’leap…but it is true, I think, that the Jewish tradition of learning, and debate, and questioning, and experience of family plays a hugely significant role in the development of psycho analytical theory and practice.

Neil Scott's avatar

Thank you Nicolas for your thoughtful response. Lots of nuance in these discussions. Curious when you encountered the emancipation in the course of your education?

Nicolas Sutro's avatar

Hey,

these themes are part of every European Jew’s backstory…part of our cultural DNA if you like. So, it’s there for everyone: non Jew and Jew alike, to engage with and think about. There’s so much material…written, photographic, art (so many artists have painted the Jewish experience from their own perspectives…again Jew and non Jew)…and I think the material does, somehow, all have the same themes running through it. In a way, how could it not.

Susanne Helmert's avatar

Another excellent read! Thank you!

Neil Scott's avatar

Thank you ☺️

Debbie Horrocks's avatar

Thanks for this introduction Neil!

KewtieBird’s Photo Journey's avatar

Very interesting, thank you.

Carolyn Scott's avatar

An interesting read 👍

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Jul 25, 2024
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Neil Scott's avatar

My pleasure! The movie is definitely worth a look.