Abstract
Abstract
This essay is an inquiry into two intermedial installations that address the experiences of people on the run from war or poverty, yet overtly hinder and problematize the viewer’s identification with the depicted refugees. By doing so, Friday Table (2013) by art collective Foundland, and Isaac Julien’s video installation Ten Thousand Waves (2010) differ from the many contemporary discourses dealing with the so-called refugee crisis that suggest a blind assumption of empathy’s benevolence. Taking theoretical texts concerning the relation between empathy, politics and the (lens-based) representation of refugees by, for instance, Slavoj Zizek (2016) and Jill Bennett (2005) as a starting point, I read Friday Table and Ten Thousand Waves as reflections on the pitfalls as well as the critical political possibilities of empathy in contemporary debates on refugees. Moreover, I argue that the two lens-based installations in question are able to examine the limits of empathy and identification with refugees through their common denominator: intermediality. Both Friday Table and Ten Thousand Waves combine lens-based media (photography, video and film) with non-lens-based medial forms such as drawings, graphs and calligraphy. As I will demonstrate, the interplay between different media is decisive when it comes to the way in which the three works of art produce, manage and reflect on the relation between spectators and depicted refugees.
Subject
Computer Science Applications,Sociology and Political Science,Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Introduction;Palgrave Studies in Literature, Culture and Human Rights;2024
2. Lampedusa in Europe; Or Touching Tales of Vulnerability;Languages of Resistance, Transformation, and Futurity in Mediterranean Crisis-Scapes;2020
3. In Precarity and Prosperity: Refugee Art Going Beyond the Performance of Crisis;Languages of Resistance, Transformation, and Futurity in Mediterranean Crisis-Scapes;2020
4. In the Refugee Machine: The Absence of Crisis and Its Critical (Re-)Production;Languages of Resistance, Transformation, and Futurity in Mediterranean Crisis-Scapes;2020
5. The Visitor, the Wanderer and the Migrant;Displacements;2019