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Photos that changed the world

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    In my industry,
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    we believe that images can change the world.
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    Okay, we're naive, we're bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.
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    The truth is that we know that the
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    images themselves don't change the world,
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    but we're also aware that, since the beginning of photography,
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    images have provoked reactions in people,
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    and those reactions have caused change to happen.
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    So let's begin with a group of images.
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    I'd be extremely surprised
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    if you didn't recognize many or most of them.
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    They're best described as iconic:
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    so iconic, perhaps, they're cliches.
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    In fact, they're so well-known
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    that you might even recognize them
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    in a slightly or somewhat different form.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I think we're looking for something more.
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    We're looking for something more.
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    We're looking for images that shine
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    an uncompromising light on crucial issues,
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    images that transcend borders, that transcend religions,
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    images that provoke us
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    to step up and do something --
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    in other words, to act.
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    Well, this image you've all seen.
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    It changed our view of the physical world.
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    We had never seen our planet from this perspective before.
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    Many people credit
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    a lot of the birth of the environmental movement
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    to our seeing the planet like this
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    for the first time --
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    its smallness, its fragility.
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    Forty years later, this group, more than most,
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    are well aware of the destructive power
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    that our species can wield over our environment.
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    And at last, we appear to be doing something about it.
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    This destructive power takes many different forms.
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    For example, these images taken by Brent Stirton
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    in the Congo.
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    These gorillas were murdered, some would even say crucified,
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    and unsurprisingly,
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    they sparked international outrage.
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    Most recently,
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    we've been tragically reminded of the destructive power of nature itself
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    with the recent earthquake in Haiti.
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    Well, I think what is far worse
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    is man's destructive power over man.
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    Samuel Pisar, an Auschwitz survivor, said,
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    and I'll quote him,
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    "The Holocaust teaches us that nature,
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    even in its cruelest moments,
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    is benign in comparison with man,
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    when he loses his moral compass and his reason."
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    There's another kind of crucifixion.
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    The horrifying images from Abu Ghraib
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    as well as the images from Guantanamo
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    had a profound impact.
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    The publication of those images,
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    as opposed to the images themselves,
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    caused a government to change its policies.
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    Some would argue that it is those images
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    that did more to fuel the insurgency in Iraq
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    than virtually any other single act.
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    Furthermore, those images forever removed
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    the so-called moral high ground of the occupying forces.
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    Let's go back a little.
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    In the 1960s and 1970s,
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    the Vietnam War was basically shown
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    in America's living rooms day in, day out.
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    News photos brought people face to face
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    with the victims of the war: a little girl burned by napalm,
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    a student killed by the National Guard
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    at Kent State University in Ohio during a protest.
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    In fact, these images became
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    the voices of protest themselves.
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    Now, images have power
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    to shed light of understanding
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    on suspicion, ignorance,
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    and in particular -- I've given a lot of talks on this
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    but I'll just show one image --
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    the issue of HIV/AIDS.
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    In the 1980s, the stigmatization of people with the disease
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    was an enormous barrier
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    to even discussing or addressing it.
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    A simple act, in 1987, of the most famous woman in the world,
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    the Princess of Wales, touching
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    an HIV/AIDS infected baby
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    did a great deal, especially in Europe, to stop that.
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    She, better than most, knew the power of an image.
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    So when we are confronted by a powerful image,
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    we all have a choice:
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    We can look away, or we can address the image.
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    Thankfully, when these photos appeared in
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    The Guardian in 1998,
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    they put a lot of focus and attention and, in the end, a lot of money
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    towards the Sudan famine relief efforts.
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    Did the images change the world?
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    No, but they had a major impact.
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    Images often push us to question our core beliefs
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    and our responsibilities to each other.
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    We all saw those images after Katrina,
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    and I think for millions of people
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    they had a very strong impact.
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    And I think it's very unlikely
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    that they were far from the minds of Americans
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    when they went to vote in November 2008.
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    Unfortunately, some very important images
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    are deemed too graphic or disturbing for us to see them.
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    I'll show you one photo here,
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    and it's a photo by Eugene Richards of an Iraq War veteran
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    from an extraordinary piece of work,
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    which has never been published, called War Is Personal.
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    But images don't need to be graphic
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    in order to remind us of the tragedy of war.
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    John Moore set up this photo at Arlington Cemetery.
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    After all the tense moments of conflict
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    in all the conflict zones of the world,
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    there's one photograph from a much quieter place
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    that haunts me still, much more than the others.
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    Ansel Adams said, and I'm going to disagree with him,
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    "You don't take a photograph, you make it."
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    In my view, it's not the photographer who makes the photo,
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    it's you.
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    We bring to each image
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    our own values, our own belief systems,
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    and as a result of that, the image resonates with us.
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    My company has 70 million images.
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    I have one image in my office.
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    Here it is.
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    I hope that the next time you see
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    an image that sparks something in you,
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    you'll better understand why,
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    and I know that speaking to this audience,
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    you'll definitely do something about it.
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    And thank you to all the photographers.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Photos that changed the world
Speaker:
Jonathan Klein
Description:

Photographs do more than document history -- they make it. At TED University, Jonathan Klein of Getty Images shows some of the most iconic, and talks about what happens when a generation sees an image so powerful it can't look away -- or back.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:42
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