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2017, Translated from Boëx, Les Carnets du Bal. Coédition LE BAL, Édition textuel, Centre national des Arts Plastiques
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5 pages
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During my five years of research on the uses and grammars of video in the context of revolt then war in Syria, many images have touched me, overwhelmed me. Others have shocked me, wounded me. And yet out of this visual, aural and emotional accumulation, three videos stand out. They permeate my memory and my thought. Each inscribed in its own way in a grey, intermediate zone, where vision is blurred and the modes of perception are redefined. In this precarious place, it is difficult to draw the boundary between an intentional filmic gesture, marked above all by the desire to testify; and non-mastery, linked to the contingency of the event, or rather, to its embodied experience. Liminal images, signifying the paradoxical uniqueness of these videos, where points of contact flourish randomly between subjective experience and history-in-the-making, between body and event, life and death.
Digital War, 2021
Since the outbreak of uprisings in Syria in 2011, which later became the ongoing armed conflict, the Syrian population has been using small digital cameras and personal mobile phones to produce a vast number of images as graphic testimonies of the crucial events taking place in the country. The documentary essay Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait (2014), co-directed by Ossama Mohammed and Wiam Simav Bedirxan, was partly made remixing these vernacular videos found online. This article is an aesthetic and sociocultural analysis of the film with the aim of remarking on the role of cameras and the power of images and cinema in a conflict such as the Syrian war, defined by a deep intermingling of actual and virtual struggle. How can the use of vernacular video of the Syrian conflict in film works influence the shaping of public perceptions of the conflict and launch a truly political reflection about it? To what extent can images be used as a political weapon in a hypermediatized era where, having proliferated to infinity, images have lost their strength? I argue that the political capacity of images is not only limited, it also depends to a great extent on mediations, gatekeepers and the material conditions of their production and dissemination, their motivations, creators and propagators, and on the aesthetical strategy used to (re)contextualize them and (re)shape the dominant representations of the conflict given by the mass media and by the authorities.
My PhD project is focused on the media coverage of the Syrian conflict and on the productions of narratives of war and, consequently, of the war of narratives these productions have entailed since the beginning of civilian protestations (March2011). A media obsession on Syrian events has been triggered since the beginning of the protestor movement and a multitude of videos are available on international mainstream media and on Youtube. The latter contains a vastness of material that constitutes the first obstacle in creating an analysing corpus. Nevertheless, these videos represent an empirical and priceless documentation giving an access not only to the events on the field, but also to the reflection of a ‘way to be’ in these events. The nature of videos changes in relation to whom have the camera. Sometimes they are pacific demonstrators, others are ‘rebels’ under the umbrella of the Free Syrian Army; others are connected to the jihadist nebulous. The context and the evolution of events play a crucial role in the manner in which these actors use the camera and change their use of it. Excluding all violent material, in my proposal, I would like to analyse two aspects of different actors’ videos in a precise context of the Syrian conflict : in one hand the contents of their declarations: which identity, which speech and which imaginary they convene? In the other hand their use of camera, which construction of the video, which staging, which use of the body?
Transnational Cinemas, 2018
Images of the Syrian crisis, circulating on the international film festival circuit as well as in mainstream and social media, help to construct narratives about those events, people and places. This article explores how three Syrian documentaries – Silvered Water: Syria Self-Portrait, The War Show and Little Gandhi – appeal to their distant spectators and how the international film festival circuit shapes their aesthetic form. While the use of citizen videos in news reporting has generated a sense of familiarity with the audiovisual style and iconography of Syrian conflict imagery, these films invite us to look at their footage in a different way, foregrounding an experience of cultural distance through an emphasis on the formal qualities of the image. By focusing on the aesthetic rather than merely evidentiary qualities of these documentaries, I draw out a particular kind of transnational cinematic encounter in which, to borrow John Berger's words, 'meaning is a response not only to the known, but to the unknown'. Drawing upon the work of Berger and Laura Marks, the article offers a new conceptualization of distant spectatorship in terms of the alterity of the image.
This study is an attempt to understand manifestations of psychological residues in the non-verbal discourse appertaining to Syrians who witnessed the period of warfare in Syria. It seeks to mull over the propositional content communicated in an assemblage of Syrian child refugees' drawings and Syrian citizens' graffiti. It also aims to convey the extent to which such pictorial genres reflect their traumatic experience along with their dilemma of agony and resilience. Essential to such an investigation is a social semiotic framework set out by Kress and Van Leeuwen (1996, 2006) in their pioneering study on the grammar of visual design. This theory is applied to the corpus so as to reveal eminent and thorny themes through unveiling the interaction among several semiotic resources. A descriptive-analytic approach is adopted to enquire the significance of interactive and represented participants in an image. The choice of Syrians' creative expressions as simulacra of reality is motivated by the assumption that they are pregnant with profound meanings that echo wartime repercussions left in their psyches.
2015
Silvered Water, Syria Self-Portrait(2014) is a French-Syrian film made by Usama Muhammad and Wiam Simav Bedirxan, an elementary school teacher, over the past years of the civil war. The war started in 2011, after the wave of Arab Spring protests and this movie is basically a found-footage made from online archives such as mobiles phones or mini-cameras videos. It also includes footages made by the two film-makers themselves. The first part of the film gives an overview of the conflict, documenting the multilateral destructions of lives and infrastructures in Homs, while the second one is more centered on the correspondence between Usama and Wiam. Wiam first contacted Usama to know if he was still in Homs to film and make a documentary about the conflict, but he was already in Paris. Usama indeed went into exile to France while Wiam stayed in Homs. So their only way to communicate is using the Internet to exchange and send videos and messages. The film itself is constructed as a work “in progress”. The shots are indeed gathered and juxtaposed according to the logic of the stream of consciousness, as they follow the thoughts of the two filmmakers. The stream of consciousness is a narrative mode characterized by its non-linearity and its randomness. It could be seen as “the multitudinous thoughts and feelings which pass through the mind1.” In the first part of the film, Usama's voice over is way more than present while he delegates it to Wiam in the second one. This use of the stream of consciousness as a method of editing actually echoes a reality of the war : the considerable quantity of videos posted on Youtube everyday, either by the rebels or by the government officers, is a striking fact that is really important to take into account when one studies representations of war. This variety witnesses the multiplicity of points of view involved in the conflict as it challenges the censorship instituted by Bachar Al-Assad It is therefore interesting to think about the status of these videos in such a regime: to what extent can they represent an alternative to propaganda? Do they embody a form of “Underground”, and if they do, how can we define it? These are the questions to which I will try to bring an answer. Firstly, I will show how new technologies can tell a counter-history, enabling a reverse angle on the catastrophe. In other words, it will be the opportunity to examine how they shape an alternative version of History. Then, it will be interesting to study the modes of filming at work in such videos, shared between spontaneity and a desire to stage reality. Finally, I will try to define what is potentially “underground” in such a form of expression, how it can convey the revolutionary speech. This analysis will be a chance to redefine, or at least, to complete the notion of underground in light of the practices involved by the evolution of technologies.
Review of Middle East Studies, 2019
in Konflikten i Syrien: årsager, konsekvenser og handlemuligheder Denmark, ISBN 978-87-574-9827-1.
This chapter gives an introduction on the role of video and mobile phone recordings in the collective memory of the Syrian uprising. It starts with an overview on how the Syrian uprising gave opportunity to the many video uploads and proceeds to chart the resultant YouTube landscape. It concludes with a short reflection how Syrian videos are used for digital memorial and remembrance as well as the challenges for future use of video as legal evidence for war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Arablit, 2015
The conflict that followed the uprising movement in Syria is the second deadliest since the Second World War. As Susan Sontag has written: «In an era of information overload battles and massacres filmed as they unfold have been a routine ingredient of the ceaseless flow of domestic, small-screen entertainment. The ultra-familiar, ultra-celebrated image – of an agony, of ruin – is an unavoidable feature of our camera-mediated knowledge of war». Much has been said about the role of the new generation media in the Arab Spring in general; but in the Syrian scenario, their usage assumed a specific function, becoming soon a mere echo of the witnesses of the rough, unfiltered horror while reproducing and generating a huge amount of footage, pictures and documents that will circulate forever in all forms of media and reach an extremely wide audience. «Pictures of hellish events – indeed – seem more authentic when they don't have the look that comes from being 'properly' lighted and composed, because the photographer either is an amateur or – just as serviceable – has adopted one of several familiar anti-art styles». Meanwhile, it is also true that the creativity of Syrian literature and art in general has increased exponentially in recent years. A common feature in this production is the continuous representation of an impasse concerning the expressive ability of individuals in the face of the unspeakable collective tragedy of enormous proportions. This reflection proposal intends to investigate how the role of artists, writers, intellectuals changes when violence and its exposure exceed the limit of imagination while the ability to represent is reduced and reality is shown without filters.
Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, 2020
2008
This dissertation investigates the social world of contemporary filmmakers in the Middle East and the way they use visual media to re-imagine existent forms of identity, envision new modes of social agency, and transform public culture in the face of dramatic instability. In the wake of the Lebanese civil war and through the tenuous postwar period, video art and experimental documentary have critiqued the politics of representation and negotiated the theoretical and structural difficulties in representing the war. These artists have activated intersections where experimental media has generated a vibrant visual culture by both building on local notions of cosmopolitanism and by participating in transnational sites of postcolonial representation. Methodologically, I employ ethnography to grapple with the public culture of Beirut as a site of avant-garde experimentation, but also to examine the city as a contested site affected by periods of rapid growth, intense violence, and urban reconstruction. To explain this cultural phenomenon, I advance the idea of ‘post-orientalist aesthetic’ to describe a mode of intellectual critique and artistic style that goes beyond Edward Said’s critique to give greater attention to self-representation in the post-911 period. This aesthetic interrogates western representational practices and also develops a localized critical analysis of Middle Eastern visual culture. This aesthetic informs a better understanding of postwar subjectivity, particularly in the way memory and lived experience becomes mediated through the materiality of objects, images, and architecture affectively inscribed with destruction and violence. The notion of the archive or the personal collection becomes of particular interest here; especially in the way these artifacts embody personalized narratives and testimonials that push back from abstracted notions of a monolithic historical narrative. Drawing on visual anthropology, media ethnography, and nonwestern film theory, this text examines the way these artists challenge realist modes of representation by utilizing both ethnographic and artistic approaches to grapple with the experience of everyday violence. In order to explore methodologies for conducting visual research in conflict zones, I conclude with an experimental auto-ethnography that appropriates these aesthetics in an effort to interrogate my positionality as an American researcher in the Middle East.
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