Allan Siegel via nettime-l on Mon, 30 Oct 2023 10:13:04 +0100 (CET)


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

<nettime> The Silence on Palestine - Redux


Hello Nettime,

What keeps recurring in my thoughts these days is the deep-rooted significance of collective memory; for any people who have a long history of oppression collective memory is indelible. Amongst Jewish people the Holocaust is part their collective memory: whether or not they are Zionists. For Palestinians the Nakba is part of their collective memory; not only the Nakba but the betrayal by British colonialists. For African Americans the realities of slavery is part of their collective memory. For any people confronted with and forced to endure the dehumanisation and injustices of colonialism, the social injustices and imbalances, collective memory is not something that is easily, if ever, erased.

Collective memory, oral traditions and the internet… like collective memories, oral traditions don’t disappear, they are transformed and reignited using new and different forms of media. What appears, in voices and words, is both personal and communal: pain, suffering, sadness, happiness, joy - a living archive of past inequities and dreams. Our diverse digital initiatives, our communal digital spaces, play a significant role in maintaining collective memory and nourishing  oral traditions.

Access to an assortment of communication tools facilitate the sharing of information and ideas that enable discursive environments and that sustain a fragile public sphere. The importance of this public sphere, and its ability to resist corporate appropriation, appears during times of extreme crisis such as the present. An avalanche of lies, ahistorical arguments, and a silencing of voices results in a distorted picture of political motives and a storm of propaganda. Most alarmingly, amongst the political classes engineering (and profiting) from the catastrophes in the Middle East, Ukraine and less visible nightmares, there is an endless stream of platitudes mourning the human consequences of war. But who will pick up the pieces? Who will rebuild? Who will give solace to the enduring emotional trauma?

These multiple crises remind us that silence is not really an option; to shatter the silence we need resilient and imaginative media resources able to navigate a myriad of political and economic obstacles.

best
allan
--
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: https://www.nettime.org
# contact: nettime-l-owner@lists.nettime.org