The purpose of a caption is to put a picture into context. By separating the caption and the image Fitterman recontextualizes the captions and brings a whole new meaning to the words. In one sense he tests how well the words actually depict what is in the image. But, he also does much more than that. He is testing the association that we as the audience make with those words we read. It starts with the Table of Contents is: “Propaganda, Family Photographs, Boycotts, Burning of Books, The Science of Race, Gypsies, Deportation, Concentration Camps, Uniforms, Shoes, Jewelry, Hair, Zyklon B Canisters, Gas Chambers, Mass Graves, American Soldiers, and Liberation (Fitterman).” Each word you read you can automatically picture a horrific image that is associated with it which gives it so much more meaning. Then, the contents of each chapter are simply captions with no image separated by a space. Below is an excerpt from the chapter “Uniforms.”
"
[photograph #97186] [photograph #59705] [photograph #24793] [photograph #49413] [photograph #64448] [photograph #42468] [photograph #27417] [photograph #67752] [photograph #59717] [photograph #49389] [photograph #59709]
The simplicity of the page adds focus to the actual words that are written. One of the coolest parts about Fitterman’s work is how “the referent — the photography — is missing. There’s nowhere for the eyes to wander. No visual details, no foreground or background, only the hard surface of the text…it is left to the imagination or whatever knowledge the reader may have (Serup).” By taking out the faces, the reader is forced to think about the things that could make up the subject of the image. Things like names on places and on ethnical, national, and cultural affiliations, family names become so much more important to the audience in order to piece an image together rather than being able to just look at the picture and see it all. This keeps the details alive in a whole new way. If the reader wants to know more, then they have to go look up what is missing which keeps the Holocaust forever in the present. As seen above, when the image and caption are put back together, the eye is immediately drawn to the image rather than the caption. The immediate reaction is a feeling. Regardless of what the feeling is, one becomes associated with the image. However, when the words from Fitterman's book are read, there is much less immediate feeling associated. This allows the audience to perceive and absorb the information in a new way.
Fitterman recontextualizes the captions which makes the work
conceptual. He may not be an artist like Kazimir Malevich who continues to
paint over the same canvas creating non-replicable streaks
in each underlying layer (kazimir-malevich.org) or an author like M. NourbeSe Philip who takes the words
from a historical court case and transforms them into a greater meaning by
projecting them across pages and over laying them to create new meanings (NourbeSe
Philip), but the goal is still the same; to make the audience think. When Malevich ends his layers and layers of work with just a black canvas, he is eliminating the context which shows the audience where his textures underneath came from. Philip shredded the words of the court case and put them back together so no matter how the original court case was written, the way that Zong! is read is with more emotion and torment than the original text. Similarly, by stripping the captions of their images, Fitterman removes the context of the entire basis which the Holocaust is taught. However, unlike Zong!, Fitterman takes the emotion out, rather than adding it in. This kind
of recontextualization makes you consider what other pairings in art and
literature could be separated but still be able to stand on their own and make the audience think in a new way.
Fitterman,
Robert. Holocaust Museum. Veer
Publication, 2011. Print.
kazimir-malevich.org. "Black
Square." 2015. Web.
Memorial, U. S. H. M. "Shmuel Shalkovsky poses between his parents in his Hashomer Hatzair uniform.". from http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/pa1143945.
Memorial, U. S. H. M. "Shmuel Shalkovsky poses between his parents in his Hashomer Hatzair uniform.". from http://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/pa1143945.
NourbeSe Philip, M. . Zong! : Wesleyan Poetry Series, 2011.
Print.
Serup, Martin Glaz. "Captions
without Images." 2015. Web.