Some of her photographs capture something else as well: what might be called the weight of history. This picture or a soldier and woman in Darfur provides a vivid example. The image is striking for several reasons, including the strong colors against an austere background, the woman’s gesture of self-protection, and her placement within the implicit tryptych of man, woman, equipment. She is the center of the photograph, and might be seen as the primary reason for the other two elements of this social whole; at the same time, she provides only a temporary separation between the man and his weapons, and so her vulnerability is all the more telling.
The genius of the the photo, however, comes from the the downward slump of his head and hers. Then seem pulled down, as if subject not only to the gravity weighing down the equipment but also to some other, terrible, collective pressure. Like gravity, it can’t be seen, but it is a human rather than a merely physical force. Perhaps their retail goods of basketball jersey and consumer tote cue our sense that their collective burden is social and psychological and not just the fatigue of nomadic life. Like the dust in the sky, a crushing fate seems to be gathering, weighing them down, sure to grind them under as help never arrives.
>>>Lynsey Addario
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