Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/56471
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Type: Book chapter
Title: Distanced suffering: photographed suffering and the construction of white in/vulnerability
Author: Szorenyi, A.
Citation: The racial politics of bodies, nations and knowledges, 2009, pp.95-115
Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Issue Date: 2009
ISBN: 9781443803267
ISSN: 1035-0330
1470-1219
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Anna Szorenyi
Abstract: There has been much debate about the ethics and effectiveness of the circulation of photographs of suffering. An analysis of commentaries and reviews of such photographs shows that the genre interpellates a particular spectator, for whom the “distance” of suffering is viewed from a comfortable centre. This mode of spectatorship is identifiable as “white” in its claim to unmarked privilege. The photographs threaten to destabilise this unmarked privilege in potentially productive ways, but the reproduction of colonial viewing relations means that whiteness remains centred. The paper concludes by attempting to destabilise the centre by bringing the discussion of the relation between suffering and sovereignty closer to “home”.
Keywords: documentary photography
whiteness
spectatorship
suffering
vulnerability
Rights: © 2009 Taylor & Francis
DOI: 10.1080/10350330902815816
Description (link): http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/36939418
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 5
Gender Studies and Social Analysis publications

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