grafika

Do not miss a new article by Lucie Ryzová: Portrait of a Martyr as a Young Man: Social Lives of Photographs in Revolutionary Egypt !

05. 11. 2025


Scores of young men and women were killed by regime forces during the Arab Spring in Egypt (2011–2013). Their photographs assumed iconic proportions, meandering online and off through countless acts of creative remediation. This essay examines the different kinds of social and political work that these photographs came to play during this period, including as indexes of the revolutionary cause and as mediators of revolutionary subjectivities at a distance. This essay departs from extant studies of visual cultures of secular martyrdom or funerary portraiture framed by notions of commemoration, and instead stresses contingent presence grounded in the specific liminal temporality of the revolutionary process. In this temporal limbo, photographs of martyrs often blurred conventional boundaries between representations and their referents. Established visual conventions of funerary portraiture were turned upside down, and portraits of martyrs were understood not as representations of the dead, but as alive and present, sometimes more alive than the dwindling group of dedicated revolutionaries.
 
Ryzova L. Portrait of a Martyr as a Young Man: Social Lives of Photographs in Revolutionary Egypt. Comparative Studies in Society and History. Published online 2025:1-34. doi:10.1017/S0010417525100194