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Inverting cultures; the pictorial ceremonial of a suicide bomber and the ”unhomeliness” off the photographic picture

Lenninger, Sara LU (2017) 13th IASS-AIS conference
Abstract
On the 14th of January in 2004, Reem Raiyshi killed herself and four Israeli soldiers in a terrorist attack at the border between Israel and Gaza. Soon after the deed pictures on Reem, and her young son, were sent to media agencies in Europe - and to circulate on the Internet.
Although the picture of Reem is her picture it is not unique, but forms part of a subculture: the ceremonial of the suicide bombers seemed at that time to require the pictorial rendering of the perpetrator/victim in his or her declaration of the action before completing the act. Published on Internet, and circulating in mass media, the picture addresses not only the Ego culture of the perpetrator /victim, but also that of the attacked culture.
To come into... (More)
On the 14th of January in 2004, Reem Raiyshi killed herself and four Israeli soldiers in a terrorist attack at the border between Israel and Gaza. Soon after the deed pictures on Reem, and her young son, were sent to media agencies in Europe - and to circulate on the Internet.
Although the picture of Reem is her picture it is not unique, but forms part of a subculture: the ceremonial of the suicide bombers seemed at that time to require the pictorial rendering of the perpetrator/victim in his or her declaration of the action before completing the act. Published on Internet, and circulating in mass media, the picture addresses not only the Ego culture of the perpetrator /victim, but also that of the attacked culture.
To come into speaking terms with the external culture - or to alter between being "alien" or to be "one of ones own” – one must submit to a meaning already known by the other culture (Lotman 2009). To insert “alien” elements, integrated with the meaning taken for granted, can be understood as a strategy in pictorial rhetoric in order to evade norm grounded predictability and invert cultural hierarchies.
This case study adds to the complication of when the same picture confirming both to the status of Ego culture and as the “threat” of an intruding other-culture in the dynamics of regulating the perception of “us and them”.
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Photographic picture, Cultural encounters, media, norm
conference name
13th IASS-AIS conference
conference location
Kaunas, Lithuania
conference dates
2017-06-26 - 2017-06-30
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
38b70a37-7d5e-4964-ae16-e465126f0193
date added to LUP
2018-01-14 21:28:25
date last changed
2023-04-27 12:37:55
@misc{38b70a37-7d5e-4964-ae16-e465126f0193,
  abstract     = {{On the 14th of January in 2004, Reem Raiyshi killed herself and four Israeli soldiers in a terrorist attack at the border between Israel and Gaza. Soon after the deed pictures on Reem, and her young son, were sent to media agencies in Europe - and to circulate on the Internet. <br/>Although the picture of Reem is her picture it is not unique, but forms part of a subculture: the ceremonial of the suicide bombers seemed at that time to require the pictorial rendering of the perpetrator/victim in his or her declaration of the action before completing the act. Published on Internet, and circulating in mass media, the picture addresses not only the Ego culture of the perpetrator /victim, but also that of the attacked culture. <br/>To come into speaking terms with the external culture - or to alter between being "alien" or to be "one of ones own” – one must submit to a meaning already known by the other culture (Lotman 2009). To insert  “alien” elements, integrated with the meaning taken for granted, can be understood as a strategy in pictorial rhetoric in order to evade norm grounded predictability and invert cultural hierarchies.<br/>This case study adds to the complication of when the same picture confirming both to the status of Ego culture and as the “threat” of an intruding other-culture in the dynamics of regulating the perception of “us and them”.<br/>}},
  author       = {{Lenninger, Sara}},
  keywords     = {{Photographic picture, Cultural encounters, media, norm}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Inverting cultures; the pictorial ceremonial of a suicide bomber and the ”unhomeliness” off the photographic picture}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}