Monday, October 1, 2012

ENG Post



Detroit’s Beautiful Ruins?

By Matthew Weiss

I’ve never looked so fondly on Detroit, for some reason or another. Part of it may be that I’ve never been there, or perhaps that the Lions are located there. Perhaps also, I don’t appreciate Detroit because it brought its own destruction in a way. But that’s an entirely different story altogether. I believe that ­Witold Rybczynski has composed a wonderful photo essay in defense of the rich history of Detroit, and how this history is being not only neglected but misused by its own inhabitants. It’s maddening that people could turn an historic theatre into a parking garage. But if any city were to do it, I guess that would be Detroit. I’m always amazed at how homeless-friendly that environment must be. I can’t imagine the homeless have to look far and wide to find a roof with no inhabitants.
Looking at the relationships between Rybczynski’s photos and captioning (in reference to McCloud’s book “Understanding Comics and the metaphorical language of Susan Sontag), I can see an inter-dependent relationship. I believe that Rybczynski’s photos can speak thousands of words about the city of Detroit, but the fact remains that his wording is also equally important. You can’t have only the pictures and receive the factual, historical data. Likewise, you can’t fully appreciate the ruins of Detroit without a mental image to bolster that thought to your brain. The images truly capture precisely what is going on in this current economically driven world. They’ve claimed their spot among other developing nation photos in proving to the rest of us just how wonderful our own sheltered cities are. It’s quite right to say that Rybczynski’s photo essay is a bold example of the aggressive and provocative nature of picture taking, having all-but taking pictures of dead homeless in abandoned warehouses.

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