ABSTRACT

Recent political conflicts signal an increased proliferation of image testimonies shared widely via social media. Although witnessing with and through images is not a phenomenon of the internet era, contemporary digital image practices and politics have significantly intensified the affective economies of image testimonies. This volume traces the contours of these conditions and develops a conception of image testimony along four areas of focus.

The first and second section of this volume reflects the discussion of image testimonies as an interplay of evidential qualities and their potential to express affective relationalities and emotional involvement. The third section focuses on the question of how social media technologies shape and subsequently are shaped by image testimonies. To further complicate the ethical position of the witness, the final section looks at image testimony at the intersection of creation and destruction, taking into account the perspectives of different actors and their opposed moral positions.

With an emphasis on the affectivity of these images, Image Testimonies provides new and so far overlooked insights in the field. It will appeal to students and researchers interested in fields such as Sociology and Social Policy, Media and Communications, Visual Arts and Culture and Middle East Studies.

chapter Chapter 1|14 pages

Image testimonies

Witnessing in times of social media

part 15I|30 pages

Epistemologies of testimonies

chapter Chapter 2|13 pages

Credibility in crisis

Contradictions of web video witnessing
Edited BySascha Simons

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

Affective images and the political trial

Edited ByJonas Bens

part |12 pages

In conversation

chapter Chapter 4|10 pages

Fearless filming

Video footage from Syria since 2011

part 57II|30 pages

Affective witnessing

chapter Chapter 5|13 pages

“Moroccan Lives Matter”

Practices and politics of affecting

chapter Chapter 6|15 pages

Drone’s-eye view

Affective witnessing and technicities of perception

part 87III|50 pages

Social media practices

chapter Chapter 8|17 pages

Witnessing to survive

Selfie videos, live mobile witnessing and black necropolitics

chapter Chapter 9|16 pages

Eye, flesh, world

Three modes of digital witnessing

part 137IV|46 pages

Witnessing destruction

chapter Chapter 10|15 pages

“Living martyrs”

Testifying what is to come

chapter Chapter 11|13 pages

Testimonies for a new social order

The Islamic State’s iconic iconoclasm

chapter Chapter 12|16 pages

From Cape Town to Timbuktu

Iconoclastic testimonies in the age of social media