As international events draw attention to the people and landscapes of Afghanistan and Pakistan, images of these war-torn countries are becoming increasingly familiar. The harsh beauty of the region has been luring photographers since the Victorian age, the most famous of whom were William Baker and John Burke. Their photographs of the "Great Game" - a phrase coined by Rudyard Kipling for the power struggles of British and Russian imperialism - were an inspiration to the writer, and remain some of the most poignant images of the British Empire.Read more
An exceptional then-and-now investigation, suffused in the tragedy of two Afghan wars. Simon Norfolk, a modern war photographer, echoes Burke's work in a profound and captivating way as he probes the artifacts of today's conflict with Burke's 1878-80 Afghan war album by his side. There is nothing else quite like it in photography.Read more
There are two unusual things about this work.Read more
A nice collection of photographs, many by John Burke of the Second Afghan War, from a prominent British Indian family collection. Full of interesting biographical facts and images.Read more
This story of French doctors in Afghanistan during the Russian invasion in the 1980s is outside the field of Raj photography. Yet it points to a direction which could make Raj photography so much more accessible: the comic book.Read more