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Unpacked Cases

Moise, G.: Unpacked Cases.
Hung. j. Eng. Am. stud. 27 (2), 323-336, 2021.
title:
Unpacked Cases
authors:
  • Moise Gabriella
published:
2021
type:
article
genre:
foreign language journal publication in domestic (Hungarian) journal
journal:
Hungarian journal of English and American studies (ISSN: 1218-7364)
language:
English
HAC:
Humanities, Literary and Cultural Studies
subjects:
migratory aesthetics, art and the political, space as political, phenomenology, collage, assemblage
abstract:
The manifold notion of migratory aesthetics serves as the critical grounding for this analysis focusing on Mohamad Hafez's and Ahmed Badr's multimedia installation, UNPACKED: Refugee Baggage (2017-2020), a socially and politically committed artistic project. Migratory aesthetics as a conceptual frame can encompass artifacts reflecting upon the experience of forced migration, displacement, and uprootedness. However, the concept also proposes the engendering of a platform for the confluence of art and the political. In accordance with the theories of Mieke Bal, Miguel Á. Hernández-Navarro, and Jacques Ranciℓere, "political" is meant to signify a space of generative conflict, an active, communal, participatory encounter between sentient bodies and artworks. UNPACKED confronts the audience on many levels: physically, by leaving them in limbo, suspended between the inside and the outside, the private and the public, safety and threat; conceptually (owing to the phenomenal, embodied experience of the viewers), by provoking a sense of dislocation and homelessness, resulting in the potential for identification with the status of being a refugee, a migrant, and an asylum seeker. UNPACKED encapsulates, both spatially and temporally, the invisible and silenced trauma of forced migration, eventually effectuating collective understanding in the constitutive political space of art.
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