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Beyond the Myth of the War Photographer

In “Shooting War,” the psychiatrist Anthony Feinstein explores the complexity of photographers’ day-to-day work covering conflict and human depravity.

Arkan’s Tigers, a Serbian paramilitary unit that was responsible for killing thousands of people during the Bosnian war, killing Bosnian Muslim civilians in Bijeljina, Bosnia, on March 31, 1992.Credit...Ron Haviv/courtesy of Glitterati Editions

The myth of the war photographer is hard to dispel. Infused with machismo, the Hollywood archetype is the hard-living, scarf-wearing loner dashing from one war zone to the next, with romantic partners as expendable as bullets. But clichés ignore the doubts, fears and moral quandaries as well as the loneliness and pain that shadow those who document the depths of human depravity. Such emotional whiplash creates that other cliché — of the tragic, fallen heroes (or heroines) broken by the horrors they’ve witnessed.

The reality of the war photographer is, of course, far more nuanced.

The psychiatrist Anthony Feinstein explores this complexity in his book, “Shooting War” (Glitterati Editions). Starting with a single, striking image from each photographer, Dr. Feinstein profiles 18 conflict photographers, including Don McCullin, Tim Hetherington and Corinne Dufka, and examines their motivations, traumas, and, most important, their resilience.

“Unlike soldiers, they are not schooled in violence,” he writes. “And yet their longevity on the front lines is unequaled. Time and again they return to the fray, knowing all too well the toll that in the end is likely to be exacted.”

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A couple walking amid the wreckage in Haiti from the 2010 earthquake.Credit...Carol Guzy/courtesy of Glitterati Editions
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Ethnic Albanian Kosovar girls celebrate their freedom on the road from Mitrovica to Pristina in front of a burning house that belonged to a Serb family.Credit...Alexandra Boulat/courtesy of Glitterati Editions
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United States Marines sleeping in their fighting holes inside a compound where they stayed for the night, in the Nawa district of Afghanistan’s Helmand Province.Credit...David Guttenfelder/courtesy of Glitterati Editions

Dr. Feinstein is well qualified on this subject. As an unwilling conscript into the South African Army as a young doctor in 1982, he saw combat in Namibia. Decades later, he conducted the first studies on trauma among war journalists and wrote a book, “Journalists Under Fire: the Psychological Hazards of Covering War,” based on the results. The book was also the basis for a documentary film he produced titled “Under Fire,” which was shortlisted for an Academy Award and won a Peabody Award. In Toronto, where he lives, he has provided psychological support for countless journalists, many of them photographers. (Disclosure: I have undergone therapy with Dr. Feinstein and was one of the journalists profiled in the film.)

Many of the images are well known, as are some of the back stories, and yet the frankness with which photographers — four of them women — reveal struggles with post-traumatic stress, depression, and other personal hardships reflects a shift. The predominantly white, Western, and male-dominated industry has traditionally shied away from openly discussing mental health.

After documenting the aftermath of the Rwandan genocide, Sebastião Salgado felt a profound sense of sadness coupled with a conviction that mankind had lost its way. Yannis Behrakis, a Greek photographer for Reuters, survived an ambush in Sierra Leone that killed two of his colleagues, one of them his closest friend, Kurt Schork, before crawling three hours through the bush to safety. He later suffered bouts of depression so severe he could barely get out of bed in the morning. Peter Magubane, a black South African who documented inequality under Apartheid, was locked in solitary confinement for 586 days without being convicted of a crime. Another South African, João Silva, a photographer for The New York Times, spent years covering the violent end of apartheid and countless wars, losing friends along the way, until he lost both legs after stepping on an improvised explosive device in Afghanistan. Accompanying his profile are three frames he snapped in the aftermath of the blast, his legs shredded, one foot dangling.

Some blows don’t come from the battlefield or at the hands of brutal regimes, but from editors, some photographers told Dr. Feinstein. After 25 years of covering conflict, during which she earned four Pulitzer Prizes, the Washington Post photographer Carol Guzy struggled with flashbacks of dead women and babies. What pushed her over the edge was not war, she said, but the declining health of family members and the death of a friend, followed by a letter from her newspaper informing her that her position had been terminated. Losing her job robbed Ms. Guzy of her identity, she said. She felt humiliated.

“At that time I was as broken as I had ever been,” she told Dr. Feinstein. “Everybody is around for the Pulitzer parties, but then you enter that darkness and find out who really loves you.”

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A soldier rests at the end of a day of heavy fighting in Korangal Valley in Kunar Province, Afghanistan, in 2007.Credit...Tim Hetherington/courtesy of Glitterati Editions
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Soldiers reacting to photographer João Silva stepping on a mine in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, in October 2010.Credit...João Silva/courtesy of Glitterati Editions
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Starving Kurdish refugees struggling for a loaf of bread during distribution of humanitarian aid at the Iraqi-Turkish border in April 1992.Credit...Yannis Behrakis/courtesy of Glitterati Editions

Conflict journalists are quick to note that what they confront pales in comparison to what the victims of war or disaster endure, Dr. Feinstein writes. Still, Santiago Lyon, who was wounded in Bosnia, reveals that he has known at least a dozen colleagues killed at work. The loss of friends and colleagues, or the loss of a job — increasingly common in an industry beset by shrinking budgets — rank among life’s most stressful events, according to a study Dr. Feinstein cited.

Beyond broken bodies, there’s growing awareness of damage done to the soul. Those types of injury involve the transgression of an individual’s moral code — by perpetrating, witnessing, or failing to prevent horrible acts, causing a crisis of conscience or emotional shame.

The Australian photographer Ashley Gilbertson, for instance, is haunted by the death of an American Marine assigned to protect him in Iraq, while the French photographer Laurence Geai grapples with her inability have to stopped a mob execution in the Central African Republic.

So why do photographers risk being beaten, jailed, tortured, held for ransom, and even maimed or killed? And how do they cope? By Dr. Feinstein’s reckoning, they are both driven and bolstered by their convictions and principles. These act as a kind of emotional armor and a source of resilience.

Mr. Gilbertson sought out the family of the Marine who died protecting him and embarked on a redemptive journey photographing bedrooms of service members who never returned from war. Ms. Geai resolved to intervene on subsequent encounters with murderous mobs. Mr. Salgado returned to his family farm. Mr. Behrakis remained creatively engaged. Mr. Magubane had the weight of history on his side. And Mr. Silva focused on his physical recovery and on what he regained each day, not on what he has lost.

“It quickly dawned on me that what he had put in place was a most effective homegrown variant of cognitive behavioral therapy, in which negative ruminations are supplanted by a more forward-looking, problem-oriented way of thinking,” Dr. Feinstein wrote of Mr. Silva. “There was no time for self-pity. It was all just focus on the day to day, on being strong.”

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Nanny and child, Johannesburg, 1956.Credit...Peter Magubane/courtesy of Glitterati Editions
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A Rwandan refugee camp in Benako, Tanzania in 1994.Credit...Sebastião Salgado/courtesy of Glitterati Editions
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The bedroom of Army Pfc. Nils G. Thompson, 19, in Confluence, Pa. Mr. Thompson was killed Aug. 4, 2005, by a sniper in Mosul, Iraq.Credit...Ashley Gilbertson

Dr. Feinstein cites Nietzsche’s idea that to profit most from existence, we must live dangerously. War offers the electrifying jolt of living on the edge, the deep friendships forged under stress, the hard partying that often follows, as well as encounters with “the nobility of the human spirit that war paradoxically unmasks,” Dr. Feinstein writes, providing an antidote to the horror.

“These positives surely outweigh the negatives, providing an enduring allure to those with the right temperament,” Dr. Feinstein concludes.

And yet, war demands a debt that never goes unpaid. Ultimately, countless factors drive photographers into war’s vortex, but perhaps the simplest reason is best: There are photographs to take and stories to be told.

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The late Associated Press Television News cameraman Miguel Gil Moreno, right, follows a Kosovo Liberation Army member in June 1998 in the province of Kosovo, while covering the escalating conflict between ethnic Albanian fighters and Serb forces.Credit...Santiago Lyon/courtesy of Glitterati Editions

Finbarr O’Reilly is a photographer and the co-author with retired Sgt. Thomas James Brennan of “Shooting Ghosts: A U.S. Marine, a Combat Photographer, and Their Journey Back from War,” recently published in paperback by Penguin.

Follow Finbarr O’Reilly on Instagram and Twitter. Follow @nytimesphoto on Twitter. You can also find Lens on Facebook and Instagram.

A correction was made on 
Jan. 8, 2019

An earlier version of this article referred imprecisely to the photographer Carol Guzy's job loss at The Washington Post and failed to attribute the description of her reaction to it. The characterization came from Anthony Feinstein's book "Shooting War."

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