Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Della Ratta, Donatella
In: Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication, 10, 2017, 2-3, p. 109-132
published:
Brill
Media Type: Article, E-Article

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further information
Physical Description: 109-132
ISSN: 1873-9857
1873-9865
DOI: 10.1163/18739865-01002003
published in: Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication
Language: Undetermined
Subjects:
Collection: Brill (CrossRef)
Table of Contents

<jats:p>In this essay, I reflect on the aesthetic, political and material implications of filming as a continuous life activity since the beginning of the 2011 uprising in Syria. I argue that the blurry, shaky and pixelated aesthetics of Syrian user-generated videos serve to construct an ethical discourse (Ranciére 2009a; 2013) to address the genesis and the goal of the images produced, and to shape a political commitment to the evidence-image (Didi-Huberman 2008). However, while the unstable visuals of the handheld camera powerfully reconnect, both at a symbolic and aesthetic level, to the truthfulness of the moment of crisis in which they are generated, they fail to produce a clearer understanding of the situation and a counter-hegemonic narrative. In this article, I explore how new technologies have impacted this process of bearing witness and documenting events in real time, and how they have shaped a new understanding of the image as a networked, multiple object connected with the living archive of history, in a permanent dialogue with the seemingly endless flow of data nurtured by the web 2.0.</jats:p>