I think we live at a point of extreme darkness and extreme brightness. Extreme darkness, because we really do not know from which direction the light would come. extreme brightness, because we ought to have the courage to begin anew.
Michel Foucault in a dialogue with Baqir Parham.
Iranian Revolution, September 1978.

Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Humans Zoos. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Humans Zoos. Mostrar todas las entradas

The Invention of the Savage: Colonial Exhibitions and the Staging of the Arab Spring

by Muriam Haleh Davis

Muriam Haleh Davis is a graduate student in the Department of History at New York University. Her research interests focus on race and decolonization in Algeria.

published at:
www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4744/the-invention-of-the-savage_colonial-exhibitions-a 
 


Watching a popular uprising in real time was indeed a dramatic experience. As viewers tuned in (or streamed in) to the violence, courage, and uncertainty of events in North Africa this year, many of them had the impression of witnessing the “actual” events, free from the framing tactics and analytical bias often found on the six o’clock news. A host of new media celebrities became household names as they reported live from Tahrir, and news outlets such as Al-Jazeera saw an unprecedented rise in viewership. Spectators were made to believe that a return to the event “itself” was once again possible after decades of being locked into what Jean Baudrillard called the hyper-real. The revolution in-and-of-itself seemed to unfold before our eyes, creating a fetish for real-time revolt.


[An image from

[An image from "The Invention of the Savage" exhibit in the Quai Branly Museum in Paris depicting a Zoological Garden of Acclimation. Image by the author.]