Harvard’s Drew Gilpin Faust on the Language of War

Splash Image - Harvard's Drew Gilpin Faust on the Language of War
March 7, 2013

The Civil War was anything but civil, as Harvard president and noted historian Drew Gilpin Faust reminded us the other evening when she spoke at American Art in conjunction with the current exhibition, The Civil War and American Art. Faust, who has been chronicling the Civil War for more than two decades, including her groundbreaking book, This Republic of Suffering, spoke on the topic of, "The True Picture as it Really Was: Seeing the Civil War," when the nation needed to find new languages—visual, written, and spoken—to make sense of the carnage. "How did they grapple with change and with trauma in their representations of the new world that war made?" she asked at the outset.

The death toll and the suffering were unfathomable; Gettysburg alone saw 7,000 casualties. How do you describe the indescribable? Faust showed us how witnesses, soldiers, and family members fell short of speech, what she referred to as "the failure of words in the face of the horror of battles' aftermath." Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. called the experience of war, "incommunicable." "The war's untellibility" Faust said, "was a product of its "unintelligibility."

Rather than words, images became the "memes" of the day—a way of translating cultural information. These memes included the image of a battlefield littered with corpses, and an equally troubling image of stacks of amputated limbs.

Could artistic representations fare any better? How did the artists respond to war? Heroic genre painting couldn't get at the horror or create an argument for a just, modern war, but photography could illustrate the meme, and perhaps represent "the true picture as it really was."

Missed Faust's talk or want to take another look? Watch our webcast.

 

Recent Posts

Image Not Available
A peek into the world of conservation and the meticulous care of James Hampton’s The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly.
Anna Neilsen
Eliza Macdonald
Katya Zinsli
Detail of illustrated portrait of Emma Amos.
04/26/2024
Painter, printmaker, and textile artist Emma Amos created colorful multi-media works that explore themes of identity.
Detail of Phoebe Kline. She is sitting in front of orchids and smiling.
Docent Phoebe Kline began at SAAM in 1974 and she's still going strong.