a small, yet gruesome photo-query.
as every collector of german amateur war-photography will have noticed, there is an abundance of images depicting destroyed “enemy” material, sometimes including rather graphic views of the killed adversary.
but what about german soldiers taking photos of their fallen comrades?
in "afrikakorps, selfportrait" dale mcguirk states "i have yet to see a photo taken by ordinary german soldiers of their own dead as they fell in battle, or any photo showing a comrade in death. (the official photographers did take shots of german dead ). for the average soldier it was common enough to snap the enemy dead, and funeral services and the graves of one´s own comrades, but not the faces of the corpses of your own side."
despite mr. guirk´s rather logical conclusion i managed to find pictures of fallen germans over the years. that they always were single finds, never showed up in albums or connected lots may prove guirk´s point and indicate they were taken by regimental photographers etc.
what is your experience with this?
fallen sturmpioniere. backside caption "juni 1940 unser kampf an der aisne, pionier pfaffmann, pionier winter"
<img src="http://image1ex.villagephotos.com/pubimage.asp?id_=2165429" width=500 height=827>
"grab von pionier kurt”
<img src="http://image1ex.villagephotos.com/pubimage.asp?id_=2165449" width=500 height=809>
as every collector of german amateur war-photography will have noticed, there is an abundance of images depicting destroyed “enemy” material, sometimes including rather graphic views of the killed adversary.
but what about german soldiers taking photos of their fallen comrades?
in "afrikakorps, selfportrait" dale mcguirk states "i have yet to see a photo taken by ordinary german soldiers of their own dead as they fell in battle, or any photo showing a comrade in death. (the official photographers did take shots of german dead ). for the average soldier it was common enough to snap the enemy dead, and funeral services and the graves of one´s own comrades, but not the faces of the corpses of your own side."
despite mr. guirk´s rather logical conclusion i managed to find pictures of fallen germans over the years. that they always were single finds, never showed up in albums or connected lots may prove guirk´s point and indicate they were taken by regimental photographers etc.
what is your experience with this?
fallen sturmpioniere. backside caption "juni 1940 unser kampf an der aisne, pionier pfaffmann, pionier winter"
<img src="http://image1ex.villagephotos.com/pubimage.asp?id_=2165429" width=500 height=827>
"grab von pionier kurt”
<img src="http://image1ex.villagephotos.com/pubimage.asp?id_=2165449" width=500 height=809>
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