Traumatic Female Gaze: Julia Pirotte Looking at the Kielce Pogrom

Author:

Bojarska Katarzyna1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Culture and Media, Faculty of Humanities, SWPS University, 03-815 Warsaw, Poland

Abstract

In this article, I analyze Julia Pirotte’s photographs of the immediate aftermath of the Kielce pogrom as a resource for conceptualizing the relationship between trauma and photography, gendered ways of seeing, memory and trauma, body and archive, vision and death, death and the archive, images and history, survival, and destruction. These specific atrocity pictures make a difference to contemporary conceptions of trauma photography and the female gaze in relation to racist, political violence. I work with theories that go beyond thinking about trauma and photography based on the Lacanian concept of tuché on the one hand, and Barthes’ punctum on the other. I investigate to what extent Pirotte’s documentation of the Jewish victims and survivors of the pogrom can be read as a belated encounter with the trauma of the Holocaust, and what it reveals about survival at the site of violence. The article is a work of a feminist academic oriented at reclaiming a space within the narrative on visual violence; the reflection on the female traumatic gaze is an element of a broader gesture aimed at reorienting the theory of atrocity pictures and documentations of political violence, as well as photography of trauma.

Funder

National Science Center

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Materials Science

Reference47 articles.

1. Danieli, Rela Mazali Ruvik (2008). The Civil Contract of Photography, Zone Books.

2. Azoulay, Ariella (2012a). Civil Imagination: A Political Ontology of Photography, Verso.

3. Prosser, Jay, Batchen, Geoffrey, Gidley, Mick, and Miller, Nancy K. (2012b). Picturing Atrocity. Photography in Crisis, Reaction Books.

4. Baer, Ulrich (2002). Spectral Evidence. The Photography of Trauma, MIT Press.

5. Levin, David Michael (1993). Modernity and the Hegemony of Vision, University of California Press.

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