Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars: The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red

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Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars : The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red. / Gade, Solveig.

I: Diffractions, Bind 3, 2014.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Gade, S 2014, 'Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars: The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red', Diffractions, bind 3. <https://diffractionsjournal.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/2solveiggadeanrisala.pdf>

APA

Gade, S. (2014). Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars: The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red. Diffractions, 3. https://diffractionsjournal.files.wordpress.com/2014/11/2solveiggadeanrisala.pdf

Vancouver

Gade S. Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars: The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red. Diffractions. 2014;3.

Author

Gade, Solveig. / Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars : The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red. I: Diffractions. 2014 ; Bind 3.

Bibtex

@article{a13c2a4705874cab90d65c62651d4796,
title = "Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars: The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala{\textquoteright}s Film 1395 Days Without Red",
abstract = "Anri Sala{\textquoteright}s film 1395 Days Without Red (2011) provides a kind of reenactment of an accidental day during the 1992-95 siege of Sarajevo. Shot in today{\textquoteright}s Sarajevo, the film revisits and embodies some of the widely circulated images of the siege, such as inhabitants sprinting across so-called Sniper Alley in order to avoid the bullets of the Bosnian Serbian snipers positioned around the city. Based on a close reading of Sala{\textquoteright}s work, this article will scrutinize how subjectivating techniques of power, during times of war, affectively work to create boundaries between those excluded from and those included within humanity. Conversely, focusing on how these techniques are being questioned within the work, I will discuss the resistance potential of what I will refer to as practices of subjectivization. Eventually, I will seek to position the “war-critical” strategy of the work within a broader context of the late modern war paradigm.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Anri Sala, war, critical art, siege of Sarajevo, manhunt, affect, political subjectivization, late modern war paradigm",
author = "Solveig Gade",
note = "->bfi.fi.dk",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
journal = "Diffractions",
issn = "2183-2188",
publisher = "Universidade Catolica Portuguesa",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Revisiting and Renegotiating Wars

T2 - The Potential of Political Subjectivization in Anri Sala’s Film 1395 Days Without Red

AU - Gade, Solveig

N1 - ->bfi.fi.dk

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - Anri Sala’s film 1395 Days Without Red (2011) provides a kind of reenactment of an accidental day during the 1992-95 siege of Sarajevo. Shot in today’s Sarajevo, the film revisits and embodies some of the widely circulated images of the siege, such as inhabitants sprinting across so-called Sniper Alley in order to avoid the bullets of the Bosnian Serbian snipers positioned around the city. Based on a close reading of Sala’s work, this article will scrutinize how subjectivating techniques of power, during times of war, affectively work to create boundaries between those excluded from and those included within humanity. Conversely, focusing on how these techniques are being questioned within the work, I will discuss the resistance potential of what I will refer to as practices of subjectivization. Eventually, I will seek to position the “war-critical” strategy of the work within a broader context of the late modern war paradigm.

AB - Anri Sala’s film 1395 Days Without Red (2011) provides a kind of reenactment of an accidental day during the 1992-95 siege of Sarajevo. Shot in today’s Sarajevo, the film revisits and embodies some of the widely circulated images of the siege, such as inhabitants sprinting across so-called Sniper Alley in order to avoid the bullets of the Bosnian Serbian snipers positioned around the city. Based on a close reading of Sala’s work, this article will scrutinize how subjectivating techniques of power, during times of war, affectively work to create boundaries between those excluded from and those included within humanity. Conversely, focusing on how these techniques are being questioned within the work, I will discuss the resistance potential of what I will refer to as practices of subjectivization. Eventually, I will seek to position the “war-critical” strategy of the work within a broader context of the late modern war paradigm.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Anri Sala

KW - war

KW - critical art

KW - siege of Sarajevo

KW - manhunt

KW - affect

KW - political subjectivization

KW - late modern war paradigm

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

JO - Diffractions

JF - Diffractions

SN - 2183-2188

ER -

ID: 123353313