Abstract
Humanitarian agencies are relying more frequently on remote sensing, satellite imagery and social media to produce accounts of violence. Their analysis aims at creating more compelling narratives for the court of law or of public opinion and has contributed towards a forensic turn, thus complicating the already fraught relationship between the practice of witnessing and political subjects. This article explores how digital witnessing allows us to ‘see’ further and deeper into places that are at a distance from us, whilst at the same time creating the conditions that make certain subjects recede from view. I will discuss these issues in relation to a country I am familiar with and one that has been central to the forensic imagination – Pakistan – although the particular geographies within Pakistan that this imagination works with are not mine. Thinking with non-linear temporalities of violence, I explore how the forensic turn may have actually contributed to the erasure of the racialized political subject.
Funder
H2020 European Research Council
Subject
Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Communication
Reference43 articles.
1. Alam F (2018) Dismantling Pakistan’s tribal areas. In: The Asia Foundation. Available at: https://asiafoundation.org/2018/10/24/dismantling-pakistans-tribal-areas/ (accessed 14 November 2020).
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2 articles.
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