Ebook: Negative Exposures: Knowing What Not To Know In Contemporary China
Author: Margaret Hillenbrand
- Tags: Photography: Political Aspects: China: History: 20th Century, Altered Prints: Political Aspects: China, Photography Handworked: Political Aspects: China, Official Secrets: Social Aspects: China, Propaganda Chinese, Collective Memory: Political Aspects: China, Nanking Massacre Nanjing Jiangsu Sheng China 1937, China: History: Cultural Revolution 1966–1976, China: History: Tiananmen Square Incident 1989
- Series: SinoTheory
- Year: 2020
- Publisher: Duke University Press
- Edition: 1st Edition
- Language: English
- pdf
When nations decide to disown their troubled pasts, how does this strategic disavowal harden into social fact? In Negative Exposures, Margaret Hillenbrand investigates the erasure of key aspects of such momentous events as the Nanjing Massacre, the Cultural Revolution, and the Tiananmen Square protests from the Chinese historical consciousness, not due to amnesia or censorship but through the operations of public secrecy. Knowing what not to know, she argues, has many stakeholders, willing and otherwise, who keep quiet to protect themselves or their families out of shame, pragmatism, or the palliative effects of silence. Hillenbrand shows how secrecy works as a powerful structuring force in Chinese society, one hiding in plain sight, and identifies aesthetic artifacts that serve as modes of reckoning against this phenomenon. She analyses the proliferation of photo-forms—remediations of well-known photographs of troubling historical events rendered in such media as paint, celluloid, fabric, digital imagery, and tattoos—as imaginative spaces in which the shadows of secrecy are provocatively outlined.
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