Save

Communing with Darwish’s Ghosts

Absent Presence in Dialogue with the Palestinian Moving Image

In: Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication
Author:
Anna Ball Department of English, Cultural and Media Studies Nottingham Trent University, UK anna.ball@ntu.ac.uk

Search for other papers by Anna Ball in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Download Citation Get Permissions

Access options

Get access to the full article by using one of the access options below.

Institutional Login

Log in with Open Athens, Shibboleth, or your institutional credentials

Login via Institution

Purchase

Buy instant access (PDF download and unlimited online access):

$40.00

In his prose poem Absent Presence (published in English translation in 2010), the revered Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish identified a source of tension that resonates through much Palestinian creative expression: a tension not between Arab and Jew, nor between Israeli and Palestinian but between presence and absence. Drawing on the many motifs of presence and absence, and by extension, of visibility and invisibility, spectrality and haunting that surface in Absent Presence, this article seeks to translate Darwish’s poetic meditations into a visual context by placing his work in dialogue with two pieces of Palestinian video art, Sharif Waked’s To Be Continued … (2009) and Wafaa Yasin’s The Imaginary Houses of Palestine (2010), which share Darwish’s preoccupation with ideas of the spectral, and of present-day Palestine’s complex relationship with its past. Mobilizing a range of critical concepts including Abu-Lughod’s theorizations of ‘postmemory’ and Derrida’s notion of ‘the spectral’, this article explores the ways in which various forms of absence arising from Palestine’s fraught national history haunt contemporary Palestinian video art, and argues that the presence of the ‘spectral’ within such works also reveals a vibrant creative present in motion.

Content Metrics

All Time Past 365 days Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 384 79 1
Full Text Views 248 10 0
PDF Views & Downloads 252 156 23