Well received, thank you!
Le mer. 29 sept. 2021 à 14:05, <publik.ims at lists.sunet.se> a écrit :
Dear all,
Welcome to next week’s IMS seminar, where we will be visited by Nina
Grønlykke Mollerup (associate professor of ethnology at the Centre for
Advanced Migration Studies at Saxo Department, University of Copenhagen),
who will give a presentation titled *'Well, Assad is still there…' -
Violence, temporality and images for elsewhe**n**.*
*Abstract:*
This presentation explores the temporality of images of violence through
the prism of the unprecedented visual documentation of the past decade's
historic uprisings in Egypt and Syria and the ensuing violence. This period
could pertinently be termed, not only a time of uprisings, but also a 'Time
of the Image' (cf. Bryant and Knight 2019:30; Hobbes 1962:100). The Time of
the Image, capitalised, designates a period in history in which images have
been significant, but where images have also been 'a way of organising time
itself' (Bryant and Knight 2019:30). Engagements with images are inherently
a temporalizing practice, always entangled in other times. When an image is
taken, it already reaches into the past, carrying along a presence of a
certain time and place and through this preservation, it reaches into the
future. As Roland Barthes (1981, 91-93) has argued, photographs violently
force on us time's passage (cf. Bryant 2014, 692). But by bringing a moment
forward and at times entailing re-membering the past, it can also provide
orientations towards the future. The presentation draws on ethnographic
fieldwork carried out over the past 13 years with Egyptian and Syrian
activists, photographers, journalists and archivists, and NGO-workers, who
have been at the forefront of visually documenting violence in the two
countries and preserving this documentation. For a while, these images were
urgent. Shared immediately with fellow protesters as well as on newspaper
front-pages and in evening news across the globe, these images were
crucially invested in the politics of the present. While hope and urgent
engagements in the present turned to trauma and despair, these images are
now part of compelling archiving efforts, put together as a collective
testament for other times. This presentation focuses on how these images
are revisited, reconstructed and employed for new purposes, allowing for
engagements with future-making.
*Bio:*
Nina Grønlykke Mollerup is associate professor of ethnology at the Centre
for Advanced Migration Studies at Saxo Department, University of
Copenhagen. She was trained as an anthropologist and holds a PhD in
communication. She has worked extensively on practices of visually
documenting (mainly) state-sanctioned violence in relation to the uprisings
and ensuing violence in Egypt and Syria. She has published in journals
like Social Analysis and Journalism Practice and is chair of the EASA Media
Anthropology Network e-seminar series.
Read more about Nina Grønlykke Mollerup here:
https://saxo.ku.dk/ansatte/?pure=da/persons/249606
Nina Grønlykke Mollerup will be presenting online at this seminar, but
for everyone else, you can choose whether you want to attend from Dacke in
Växjö or via zoom:
https://lnu-se.zoom.us/j/940933326
The seminar is on the 6 Oct. from 10.15-12.00 CEST.
Best wishes,
Signe – on behalf of IMS
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IMS website:
https://lnu.se/en/research/searchresearch/linnaeus-university-centre-for-in…
*Signe Kjaer Jensen / PhD*
*Senior Lecturer, Department of Film and Literature*
Linnæus University
Department of Film and Literature
351 95 Växjö
Sweden
https://lnu.se/personal/signe.kjaerjensen/
*signe.kjaerjensen at lnu.se <signe.kjaerjensen at lnu.se>*
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