Gazes from Syria Media Witnessing in Times of Crisis

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2022
Host editors
  • I. Saloul
  • A.S. Hansen
  • R. Deim
  • D. Grabowski
  • M. Sülek
  • J. van der Naaten
Book title AHM 2022 : Witnessing, Memory and Crisis
Book subtitle AHM Annual Conference 2022 : Proceedings for the annual conference hosted by the Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM) : June 30-July 2, 2022, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
ISBN
  • 9789463724494
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9789048557578
Series History, Culture, and Heritage
Event AHM Conference 2022: ‘Witnessing, Memory, and Crisis’
Pages (from-to) 94-104
Number of pages 11
Publisher Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA)
Abstract
There seems to be a general agreement that reporting from war is of utmost importance and a necessary precondition to addressing a conflict. Reading and viewing the news in this context is often referred to as witnessing the unfolding crisis, even though the newsreaders/viewers are not present in time and space. Taking my art activist project “Gazes From Syria: Ten Years of Uprising / Multi-Sided Civil, Sectarian, and Proxy War,” which draws on ten years of reporting in the International New York Times about the war in Syria, as an example, this paper examines if and how following the news can be seen as media witnessing. Analysing the news reporting and photography as witnessing texts, I show how the specific conditions of news reporting and photography contribute to a sense of immediacy and actuality and can thoroughly affect media audiences. Inherent in news reporting from war is the demand to take notice and intervene, which implicates the newsreaders/viewers in the witnessing process of addressing and responding. Far from passive spectators, many newsreaders/viewers accept the responsibility of the witness to testify in a variety of ways, co-constructing the truth of the witnessed event, and shaping public opinion and collective memory. Finally, the paper points to the temporal horizons of witnessing texts, which change over time from immediate testimony to later potentially being evidence in a court of law, and finally how they become historical documents in the archive, without losing their witnessing potential.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.5117/9789048557578/AHM.2022.013
Downloads
013 (Final published version)
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