Looking and Remembering: John Berger’s And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos

Why Return to Berger?

John Berger was never just a critic. He was a storyteller, an essayist, a drawer of connections between the visible and the invisible. In And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos—a slim, hybrid work first published in 1984—he dismantles the neat boundaries between art criticism, personal memory, poetry, and philosophy.

I first encountered this book during my master’s studies in cultural anthropology, where Berger’s work was treated not only as literature, but as methodology—a way of seeing and thinking about lives. Reading it again now, the book feels startlingly contemporary, even necessary.

In a world saturated by images and half-told stories, Berger reminds us not only how to look, but why it matters. For those of us engaged in the work of preserving life stories—be it through memoirs, interviews, or everyday remembrance—this book is a quiet manifesto.

I. Seeing as an Act of Love

From the first page, Berger sets up a tension between absence and presence, loss and longing. “To look is an act of choice,” he writes in Ways of Seeing, and Faces extends that insight into the realm of memory. To look at a face, a landscape, a photograph—even briefly—is to engage in a moment of affection, even if that moment is fleeting or fraught.

What Berger does masterfully is connect the visual to the emotional. He does not just ask what we see, but what we miss when something disappears. In this way, looking becomes mourning, and remembering becomes a form of devotion.

Berger’s sensibility often reminds me of Mark Rothko’s paintings—those blurred edges, suspended forms, fields of color that seem to weep without a face. Like Rothko, Berger’s work does not shout, but it lingers. It feels its way into the room. To behold is to ache, both artists seem to say.

For families struggling to understand the people they’ve lost—or are losing—this offers something profound. Berger teaches that the practice of noticing is itself a form of love.
This perspective, in turn, echoes Erich Fromm’s definition of lovenot as a fleeting feeling, but as an ongoing act of care, attention, and responsibility.


II. The Body as Archive

Berger returns often to the idea that memory is not just a mental exercise. It is embodied. We carry our pasts in our gestures, in how we sit, how we carry bags, how we turn our faces.

“The memory of the body is stronger than that of the mind,” he writes.

This connects beautifully to what we now understand through neuroscience: that memory is deeply connected to sensation—smells, touches, sounds. Berger intuited this decades ago. He doesn’t just describe a past moment; he inhabits it, and asks us to do the same.

For those trying to reconstruct the lives of their parents or grandparents, this insight is invaluable. Look not only at their words, he says, but at their postures, their rituals, their silences. The body remembers.


III. Time and Fragmentation

There is no linear narrative in Faces. Berger doesn’t believe in biography as chronology. Instead, the book is structured in fragments: prose sections interspersed with short poems, recollections broken up by aphorisms or philosophical insights. This can be disorienting at first. But then you realize: this is how memory actually works.

Time in this book folds in on itself. A lover long gone appears in a sentence as suddenly as a remembered painting. There are no clean beginnings or endings—just returns.

“Every city has a sex and an age which has nothing to do with demography,” he writes. So, too, every memory has a season, a mood, a weather of its own.

For anyone documenting a life story, Berger’s structure is an important reminder: people do not remember linearly. They remember in constellations.


IV. Language and Loss

One of the most poetic threads in the book is Berger’s meditation on language—particularly in exile. Having lived much of his life in rural France, away from his native England, he reflects on how language can become foreign even when it’s yours.

This is especially poignant for anyone who has migrated, or aged into silence, or simply felt their own vocabulary grow strange. Berger’s prose often slips into the language of longing—for a homeland, for a lover, for clarity.

For adult children trying to piece together a parent’s life—especially across cultures—this theme resonates. Berger seems to whisper: they may not have said everything, but they left clues. In silences. In syntax. In the words they couldn’t quite find.


V. Photography and the Presence of Absence

Throughout Faces, Berger writes about photographs—not just as objects, but as vessels of presence and absence. A photograph captures a moment that no longer exists. And yet, the image persists.

“What makes a photograph profound,” he suggests, “is not only what it shows, but what we know has disappeared.”

This is not merely poetic—it is practical. When working with family archives, photographs can feel like puzzles with missing pieces. Who is that person? What day was this taken? Why are they smiling?

Berger’s approach invites us to treat photos not as evidence, but as invitation—to imagine, to speculate, to feel.


VI. Love, Separation, and the Ordinary

One of the most tender themes in Faces is separation. Berger writes about lovers parted by time, by war, by choice. But the book’s most aching moments are about everyday separations—those caused by the drift of years, misunderstandings, or simply growing older.

There’s a section where he writes about waiting for someone who will never arrive. And yet, the book never dips into sentimentality. Berger’s gift is to treat the ordinary—waiting for a train, chopping wood, drying dishes—as sites of philosophical revelation.

For us at StoryTable, this is key. So often, people think their lives aren’t “interesting enough” to preserve. Berger dismantles that. Every life, he insists, is a web of meaning.


VII. A New Kind of Biography

In this book, biography is not about summary. It’s not about achievements or clean timelines. It’s about presence. About holding contradictions.

“To bear witness is not a passive act,” Berger says. It’s participatory.

Faces isn’t just about one man’s thoughts—it’s a blueprint for how we might begin to truly see one another. And in this way, it becomes an argument not only for remembering, but for preserving.


Final Reflection: What Berger Offers Us Now

In the years since its publication, And Our Faces, My Heart, Brief as Photos has become a quiet classic. Not a bestseller. Not a pop sensation. But a book that is passed from hand to hand when someone loses a parent. Or when someone tries to write their memoir. Or when someone needs to remember how to look.

It’s not a book that explains how to tell stories. It is itself a story: broken, beautiful, unfinished.

In our work documenting lives—especially those of elders—Berger reminds us that we are not just collecting facts. We are holding space. For contradiction. For forgetting. For love.

To tell someone’s story is to risk seeing them fully. It is to say: your face, your voice, your way of being in the world—brief as it was—mattered.

Portraits in Motion: Why Biography Still Matters

Reading Parul Sehgal’s “Can You Ever Really Know a Person? Biographers Keep Trying”
By StoryTable Journal

By the time you’ve read a hundred pages into a good biography, you begin to feel the pull:
that uncanny sensation that someone else’s life has become your own. You look up from the book and the streetlights, your coffee mug, even the shape of your day feels somehow shaped by the choices of a long-gone stranger.

Parul Sehgal, in her elegant June 13 New York Times essay, dives deep into this phenomenon—not just how we read biographies, but why they endure. In an age of shrinking attention spans and minimalism across media—shorter books, smaller casts, quicker endings—biography remains proudly maximalist. “Fat, splendid and wholly implacable,” she writes. It resists the trend.

But more than its thickness, it’s biography’s insistence on the contradictions of character that makes it feel urgent. It asks: how do people become who they are? How does motive unfurl from memory? How much of the self is performance? Sehgal traces how recent biographers have turned away from “definitive portraits” in favor of fragmented, pluralist selves. This is not biography as monument-building, but biography as excavation.

She gives the example of James Baldwin—whose newly opened archives have produced not one, but two major biographies this year, each approaching him from different angles. One focuses on Baldwin’s erotic and domestic life, another emphasizes his shifting public personas. Both refuse neatness. Neither pretends to settle him. This, Sehgal suggests, is the strength of modern life-writing: the ability to hold contradiction without flattening it into a slogan.

And while the genre has often focused on the public sphere—the “eminent lives” of politicians, generals, artists—modern biography increasingly attends to the personal and even the ordinary. Paradoxically, it does this by embracing its limits. As she quotes biographer Michael Holroyd:

“The need to do this, to keep death in its place, lies deep in human nature.”

At StoryTable, we believe the same. Our journal began with the idea that everyone—famous or not—carries a story worth hearing. Not just for history’s sake, but because understanding lives, in their full complexity, helps us understand our own.


Biography as Empathy

This is where Sehgal’s essay turns from literary reflection to something more intimate. She draws attention to the most powerful shift in biography today: its willingness to remain unfinished. In her survey of books on Sylvia Plath, Baldwin, Adrienne Rich, Fanon, Candy Darling and others, what emerges is not a unified message but a kaleidoscope of contradictions. These are not books that pretend to know their subjects completely. Instead, they model how to stay with the questions.

It’s tempting to think of biography as an old-fashioned genre, interested in dusty letters and exact dates. But what makes it vibrant—what makes it necessary—is its devotion to character. The kind of character that cannot be coded into algorithms or inferred from behavior alone. Sehgal writes that AI can scrape the surface of motive (“I hate, I want”) but not its depth—its body, its shame, its backroom whispers. “A.I. knows only to enter through the front door,” she writes. Biography, by contrast, “observes the true story happening elsewhere.”


Understanding Those Closest to Us

What Sehgal’s essay reminds us—perhaps most painfully—is how difficult it can be to truly know even the people we live with. Parents, siblings, partners. We share meals, homes, even lifetimes, yet so often we miss the chance to understand them as they wish to be understood. Not just in what they did, but why they did it. What they hoped for. What hurt them. What they were trying to carry or repair.

Sometimes they don’t explain—out of habit, pride, or fear. Sometimes we don’t ask—assuming there’s time, or thinking we already know. But the truth is, many people leave this world never having had the space to tell their story, even if just as an excuse, an apology, or a hope.

That is why preserving life stories matters. It’s not just for posterity. It’s for connection—for offering those we love the dignity of being heard, and for ourselves, the grace of understanding.


The Quiet Urgency

Toward the end of her piece, Sehgal offers an unforgettable image: Baldwin as a child, daydreaming while watching his mother receive a scrap of black velvet from a neighbor. “That is a good idea,” his mother says, and for years Baldwin believes an “idea” is something dark, soft, and starry. It’s a moment too small for history books, too private for footnotes—but it is the core of biography. Not just what happened, but how it was felt.

At StoryTable, we’re building a space to capture these very moments—the velvet scraps, the quiet exchanges, the stories told too late. We believe that a person is not a set of events, but a process of becoming. We believe in the power of remembering someone as they truly were: complex, contradictory, unfinished.

Sehgal’s essay ends with Ellmann’s reflection on what drives biography:

“to know another person who has lived as well as we know a character in fiction, and better than we know ourselves.”

That is a challenge. And it is a gift.

Our goal, through writing, reflection, and dialogue, is to meet that challenge—one life at a time.