The Fugitive Image: Colonial Terror and Contemporary Art
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.15847/obsOBS0001815Keywords:
Visual Culture, Atrocity Photography, Colonial Propaganda, Decolonization WarsAbstract
As colonial visual culture now fully integrates the mainstream of historical research and artistic practice at a global level, one subset of imagery still remains woefully unaddressed: the atrocity photograph. This essay provides a brief historical contextualization of the role of photography in decolonization wars and the concurrent emergence of critical theorizing on violent images, and why it still remains exceedingly difficult to analyse graphic pictures in the colonial context; then, honing in on the case of the Portuguese colonial wars in Africa (1961-1975), it examines the rare appropriation of a shocking photograph in Daniel Barroca’s work Circular Body (2015).Downloads
Published
2020-09-28
How to Cite
Dias Ramos, A. (2020). The Fugitive Image: Colonial Terror and Contemporary Art. Observatorio (OBS*). https://doi.org/10.15847/obsOBS0001815
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Section
Articles