Date: Wednesday, 24 March⋅11:00 – 12:00
Zoom:
https://lnu-se.zoom.us/j/64735625753
Title: Urgent images: Temporal engagements with images of violence by Nina Grønlykke
Mollerup, University of Copenhagen
Abstract The past decade witnessed historic uprisings against Middle Eastern
dictatorships. The violence that followed has been visually documented to an unprecedented
extent. In this talk, I will draw on previous and ongoing ethnographic fieldworks with
Egyptian and Syrian activists, photographers, journalists and archivists as well as
NGO-workers, who have all contributed to the documentation, sharing and preservation of
images of often state-sanctioned violence over the past decade in the two countries. At
the time of documentation, many of these images were urgent. During the early years and
months of street protests and clashes, images would be shared promptly, encouraging people
to join ongoing protests and battles and demanding political responses. Protests in
Egyptian and Syrian streets have largely been eradicated by a restoration of military
dictatorship (in the case of Egypt) and a prolonged war with international involvement (in
the case of Syria). Meanwhile the urgency of the present shifted towards temporal
orientations towards the future and the past through archiving, making these images
available for justice processes and collective memory-making. I propose that examining the
temporality of images, not only through their immediate or most prominent uses, but also
through later re-uses, re-circulations and re-significations, will allow us to move beyond
understandings of images as political, emotional or aesthetic. I thus seek to illuminate
the social life of images by exploring how images engage both urgently and latently in the
present, how they reach into the past and how they enable orientations towards the
future.
Short bio
Nina Grønlykke Mollerup is Associate Professor in Ethnology and at the Centre for Advanced
Migration Studies (AMIS) in the Saxo Department, University of Copenhagen. She was trained
as an anthropologist and holds a PhD in communication. She has done substantial
ethnographic research with Egyptian and Syrian activists, photographers and journalists
over the past 13 years. Her research revolves around visual documentation of conflict and
related claims to knowledge. She participates in the research project, Archiving the
future: Re-collections of Syria in war and
peace<https://ccrs.ku.dk/research/cross-cultural-studies/archiving-the-future/>. She
has published in Social Analysis, Journalism and International Journal of Communication,
among others.