Global Val welcomes her first guest blogger & international correspondent, Sylvia C. Frain, PhD Student at the National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Otago, New Zealand.
Why Photographs and Images of Rolihlahla Nelson Mandela are So Important
by Sylvia C. Frain
While President Barack Obama’s ‘selfie’ picture with British Prime Minister David Cameron and Denmark's Prime Minister Helle Thorning Schmidt at the memorial of Rolihlahla ‘Nelson’ Mandela now dominates the international media’s attention, I would like to offer a more in-depth analysis regarding photographs and images within the coverage of Mandela’s passing.
A reflection and exploration of this past week’s vast amounts of photographs and images has demonstrated a parallel struggle for freedom. Photographs of Mandela that we are sharing and reposting were once banned from the media and outlawed from the public under apartheid. However, this past week they have flowed freely across online media galleries and slideshows unlike ever before.
A review of online news outlets and blogs from the day of his death and until his memorial service has produced numerous titles for Mandela. Depending on the source, he has been branded as a revolutionary, a protestor, a president, a trouble maker, a terrorist, a freedom fighter, a political activist, a rebel, a leader, a prisoner, world’s best negotiator, a peacemaker, and a legend. While these titles are descriptive and expressive, a photograph or image of him communicates much more.
“On the day Nelson Mandela died, like millions of other people around the world, my 14-year-old updated his Facebook page with a picture of Mandela… I have been mesmerized by pictures of him, soaking in gallery after gallery of photographs of his remarkable life.”
Nearly all online media and blogs relating to the coverage included at least one photograph or image, producing an inclusive visual language. Each feature included a range of visual components: a slideshow, visual timeline, or an interactive photo essay with photographs by professionals as well amateurs. “Photography is the starting point of mass media and communication, and is the most common language of our civilization.” Since its invention, photography has been examined and critiqued, regarding its powerful role to revisit history, examine politics, and to understand international affairs visually.
History has demonstrated that photography’s power can be used for ‘good and evil’, as a propaganda tool, for political manipulation, and as a method to control the representation of conflict and war. It has the power to “deaden [the audience] to political horrors and condition them to accept racism, sexism and deepening class divisions as natural, necessary conditions of existence.”
We can come to understand history through the images of the era, or even the absence of images. “Prohibitions against photographs always indicate a healthy respect for their power.” According to the BBC, during the 1970s and 1980s, “carrying the image of Mandela or being overheard saying his name could result in torture and a prison sentence.” Not only was his photograph illegal, the apartheid state banned Mandela posters and “imposed stiff sentences on anyone caught smuggling posters across the border.” See The New York Times for apartheid posters from the 1980s and 1990s. This censorship and control further helped to elevate visual representation of him as a symbol against oppression and defiance of unjust leadership. The more the regime tried to hide, suppress and control his image, the greater the drive was to expose it.
“As you can imagine, there was intense competition to get the first picture of Mandela. A day before his release, the South African government reversed its policy and published a picture of Mandela.” Once released in 1990, and thanks to contemporary technology, live images of a ‘free Mandela’ were transmitted via satellite to audiences around the world. This photograph of a free man, a man who had spent so many years in prison, and endured institutionalised racism, now could be seen in full light, and his image became an international icon.
Photographs and images of Mandela are a symbol for common experiences of the struggle against oppression, as well as a figure of forgiveness, strength, and democracy. His image represents more than a resilient and tolerant man, but also a resistance ideology, one that works towards freedom and against repression worldwide. Through this past weeks' ‘Life in Pictures’ online slideshows and galleries, photographs have communicated and visually expressed the universal struggle against domination as well as creating the image of common humanity.
Mandela’s passing is unlike any other magnitude of global grievance, mourning or loss. Photography shapes public memory, assists with making sense of a shared experience and can relay emotions better than any written text. His actions, words and practices have reached people all over the world, and people want to celebrate his vision. The photography of the global reaction, as well as pictorial tributes, which are featured on nearly every media site, show people from all walks of life, speaking different languages, across borders and spanning generations around the world gathered to pay respect, and join together in remembrance and collectively mourn Mandela.
The Wall Street Journal developed a live interactive obituary platform, with global user content, Twitter posts and quotes embedded within the article. The Australian ABC featured a video timeline of his life and major events also a tribute page with mix-media including user content and Instagram photographs. These sites provide a shared pace to instantly and visually collaborate and memorialize Mandela globally.
Mandela’s image now “adorns everything from expensive cotton pillowslips, to fridge magnets, to dusty township tavern walls.” The pictures of Mandela were once outlawed, and now have become one of the most shared images online. I believe it will continue to influence people struggling and resisting oppression world-wide for generations to come, much longer than any number of world leader ‘selfies’.
December 2013
Sylvia C. Frain
PhD Student
National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies
University of Otago
520 Castle Street
Dunedin 9054, New Zealand
_______________________________________________________________________________________
1. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sue-pleming/remembering-nelson-mandela_b_4406395.html
2. Freund, G. l. (1980). Photography & society. Boston: Boston : D. R. Godine.
3. Mitchell, W. J. T. (1995). Picture theory: essays on verbal and visual representation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
4. Goldberg, V. (1993). The power of photography: how photographs changed our lives. New York: Abbeville.
5. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-25256818
6. http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/bring-me-the-head-of-nelson-mandela
7. http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2013/12/05/world/africa/Mandelas-Struggle-in-Posters.html?smid=tw-share
8. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sue-pleming/remembering-nelson-mandela_b_4406395.html
9. http://graphicsweb.wsj.com/documents/ImageGrid/?slug=Mandela
10. http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-12-06/tributes-to-nelson-mandela/5139520?section=australianetworknews
11. http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/bring-me-the-head-of-nelson-mandela
Friday, December 13, 2013
Friday, November 15, 2013
KPFA Women's Magazine - Monday, November 18, 2013: Poetry as an Agent of Change
Monday, November 18th, 1-2pm
Women's Magazine with Global Val
2nd Women's Poetry Showcase: Poetry as an Agent of Change
KPFA 94.1 & kpfa.org
There are several ways to listen LIVE:
KPFA 94.1 FM
KPFB 89.3 FM
Comcast Digital Cable 967
iPhone: Public Radio App
Android: TuneIn Radio App
WebOS: Public Radio App
KPFA Live Stream Channel: kpfa.org
LISTEN to the show: Click this link to access the Archive/Podcast on kpfa.org and kpfawomensmag.blogspot.com
Poetry as an Agent of Change
When I started producing shows for Women's Magazine on KPFA 94.1, my intention was and remains to be highlighting women who are changing the world. I've brought it back to poetry this month because Poetry is an underdog of change. In this show, we'll hear from two poets who are using their words & work to inspire and activate others toward personal growth and creative community-based solutions for some of the world's most daunting challenges.
Poets
Alicia Zakon is an educator and spoken word poet in & from Berkeley, CA. She's written a poetic memoir called "Laundry and Love Notes", a collection of poems she wrote from age 10-25 that reveal her own choices in love & dating and gives readers a raw examination of how she has grown as a young woman. She plans to teach a series of free poetry workshops in 15 cities around the country so other young women can receive the gift of poetry as a means to deal with life's transgressions and gain a better sense of self-worth. You can contribute to her workshop tour by purchasing her book on her website, www.laundryandlovenotes.com
Alexandria 'Rain' is an ambassador of peace and positivity who came into our lives at The Common Thread Collective (Fridays 3-6pm) at Mutiny Radio this past summer. She has her feet, hands and heart planted in the grass roots as she shares her vision about how the creative collective can help us reinvigorate and inspire each other.
- She's currently involved with CAJA-3, standing up to feminicide by lobbying for a better distribution of US funds allotted for the drug war in Mexico, and by empowering a group of women in Mexico, who are suffering domestic violence, to grow and sell local delicacies to gain independence.
- She was also selected to participate in a retreat with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom as it looks ahead into the next 100 years of the organization. See the WILPF website to sign the petition to ratify CEDAW and let the 113th Congress know - on the day they're sworn in - that Americans want the US to join 185 other countries who have signed on to the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women.
Musicians
The Necatarian Collective from the Big Island of Hawaii consists of three goddesses: Mary Isis, Sea Star and Parmita, accompanied by their friends, Lotus Moon. Today's show features:
"Cosmic Mind" and "Earth's Child" by Mary Isis from her album Nectarian
"The Wellspring" by Sea Star from her album Sacred Red
and a special live track of "Only Love Can Heal Us" by Parmita
All their music can be enjoyed and downloaded at www.nectarianmusic.com
There are several ways to listen LIVE:
KPFA 94.1 FM
KPFB 89.3 FM
Comcast Digital Cable 967
iPhone: Public Radio App
Android: TuneIn Radio App
WebOS: Public Radio App
KPFA Live Stream Channel: kpfa.org
Archive/Podcast will be posted here and on kpfa.org and kpfawomensmag.blogspot.com
Thank you for your participation!
Global Val
Women's Magazine with Global Val
2nd Women's Poetry Showcase: Poetry as an Agent of Change
KPFA 94.1 & kpfa.org
There are several ways to listen LIVE:
KPFA 94.1 FM
KPFB 89.3 FM
Comcast Digital Cable 967
iPhone: Public Radio App
Android: TuneIn Radio App
WebOS: Public Radio App
KPFA Live Stream Channel: kpfa.org
LISTEN to the show: Click this link to access the Archive/Podcast on kpfa.org and kpfawomensmag.blogspot.com
Poetry as an Agent of Change
When I started producing shows for Women's Magazine on KPFA 94.1, my intention was and remains to be highlighting women who are changing the world. I've brought it back to poetry this month because Poetry is an underdog of change. In this show, we'll hear from two poets who are using their words & work to inspire and activate others toward personal growth and creative community-based solutions for some of the world's most daunting challenges.
Poets
Alicia Zakon is an educator and spoken word poet in & from Berkeley, CA. She's written a poetic memoir called "Laundry and Love Notes", a collection of poems she wrote from age 10-25 that reveal her own choices in love & dating and gives readers a raw examination of how she has grown as a young woman. She plans to teach a series of free poetry workshops in 15 cities around the country so other young women can receive the gift of poetry as a means to deal with life's transgressions and gain a better sense of self-worth. You can contribute to her workshop tour by purchasing her book on her website, www.laundryandlovenotes.com
Alexandria 'Rain' is an ambassador of peace and positivity who came into our lives at The Common Thread Collective (Fridays 3-6pm) at Mutiny Radio this past summer. She has her feet, hands and heart planted in the grass roots as she shares her vision about how the creative collective can help us reinvigorate and inspire each other.
- She's currently involved with CAJA-3, standing up to feminicide by lobbying for a better distribution of US funds allotted for the drug war in Mexico, and by empowering a group of women in Mexico, who are suffering domestic violence, to grow and sell local delicacies to gain independence.
- She was also selected to participate in a retreat with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom as it looks ahead into the next 100 years of the organization. See the WILPF website to sign the petition to ratify CEDAW and let the 113th Congress know - on the day they're sworn in - that Americans want the US to join 185 other countries who have signed on to the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women.
Musicians
The Necatarian Collective from the Big Island of Hawaii consists of three goddesses: Mary Isis, Sea Star and Parmita, accompanied by their friends, Lotus Moon. Today's show features:
"Cosmic Mind" and "Earth's Child" by Mary Isis from her album Nectarian
"The Wellspring" by Sea Star from her album Sacred Red
and a special live track of "Only Love Can Heal Us" by Parmita
All their music can be enjoyed and downloaded at www.nectarianmusic.com
There are several ways to listen LIVE:
KPFA 94.1 FM
KPFB 89.3 FM
Comcast Digital Cable 967
iPhone: Public Radio App
Android: TuneIn Radio App
WebOS: Public Radio App
KPFA Live Stream Channel: kpfa.org
Archive/Podcast will be posted here and on kpfa.org and kpfawomensmag.blogspot.com
Thank you for your participation!
Global Val
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Litcrawl 2013: Global Val Reads with SF Poet Laureate, Alejandro Murguia!
This year, I'll be reading in Litcrawl with San Francisco's Poet Laureate, Alejandro Murguia!
Post Script, if you missed the intimate performance that night, here's link to a video by April Ellis, who captured it beautifully: Val Ibarra - LitQuake 2013
International Poetry Library Presents…"Los Días de Los Muertos Celebration" with Poet Laureate of San Francisco, Alejandro Murguía. The Executive Director of the International Poetry Library of San Francisco, Kimberly Escamilla, has invited me to read poetry at this event. It's an honor and I know it's going to be a fabulous evening.
Saturday, October 19th
Litcrawl/ Phase 3 / 8:30-9:30pm
Casa Bonampak
1051 Valencia St.
Peace & Poetry,
Global Val
Post Script, if you missed the intimate performance that night, here's link to a video by April Ellis, who captured it beautifully: Val Ibarra - LitQuake 2013
International Poetry Library Presents…"Los Días de Los Muertos Celebration" with Poet Laureate of San Francisco, Alejandro Murguía. The Executive Director of the International Poetry Library of San Francisco, Kimberly Escamilla, has invited me to read poetry at this event. It's an honor and I know it's going to be a fabulous evening.
Saturday, October 19th
Litcrawl/ Phase 3 / 8:30-9:30pm
Casa Bonampak
1051 Valencia St.
Peace & Poetry,
Global Val
Monday, October 7, 2013
100 Thousand Poets For Change presents...
Please join us in Berkeley on Sunday, October 13, 2013, 4pm, for a night of celebrating poetry as an instrument of change around the world!
Please join us in Berkeley on Sunday, October 13, 2013, 4pm, for a night of celebrating poetry as an instrument of change around the world!
Monday, August 19, 2013
Governor Brown Vetoes AB 926
Thank you, Governor Brown, for acknowledging the dangerous enticement that AB 926 would have posed on women in California who may have been unduly seduced into "donating" their eggs for research at risk of exploitation and health complications.
Click here to read the article and find the link to his Veto Letter to the Legislature.
http://www.synbiowatch.org/2013/08/california-governor-jerry-brown-vetos-bill-that-would-have-legalized-sale-of-human-egss/
Thank you to all of my guests on Women's Magazine for spreading their expertise and concerns for women's health.
If you missed the show, you can go to the directly to the archive HERE!
Peace and Thank You,
Global Val
Click here to read the article and find the link to his Veto Letter to the Legislature.
http://www.synbiowatch.org/2013/08/california-governor-jerry-brown-vetos-bill-that-would-have-legalized-sale-of-human-egss/
Thank you to all of my guests on Women's Magazine for spreading their expertise and concerns for women's health.
If you missed the show, you can go to the directly to the archive HERE!
Peace and Thank You,
Global Val
Sunday, August 4, 2013
KPFA "Women's Magazine" August 5th: Human Egg Harvesting & AB 926 + More!
Monday, August 5, 1-2pm
Women's Magazine with Global Val
KPFA 94.1 & kpfa.org
TUNE IN to this important two-part show that will address a range of women's reproductive health issues.
If you missed the show, you can go to the directly to the archive HERE!
Part I: Harvesting Human Eggs & International Surrogacy: Risks to Health & Human Rights
Discussing California AB 926 (on Governor Brown's desk as of August 5th): A bill that would repeal the current limits on compensation for women who 'donate' their eggs to research, and elevate it to $5-10K. Framed as a 'women's equity' bill, it neglects the health risks of invasive egg donation procedures. We'll discuss the history of this legislation, the health risks - as seen in the acclaimed documentary Eggsploitation - as well the legal argument against harvesting human eggs & the under-regulated industry of international surrogacy.
Featured Guests:
- Diane Tober, PhD, Assoc. Executive Director of the Center for Genetics and Society
- Jennifer Lahl, Executive Producer & Director of the Award Winning documentary Eggsploitation: The Fertility Industry has a Dirty Little Secret - www.eggsploitation.com
- Mona Lisa Wallace, Esq.
AB 926 is going to be on Governor Jerry Brown's desk as of Monday, August 5th 2013, where he has 12 days to sign it, veto it or let it pass into law without a signature. To contact the Governor, you can write to his aide: lark.park@gov.ca.gov
Part 2: Reports from the Abortions Rights Freedom Ride
The first in a series of regular updates on KPFA Women's Magazine directly from the Abortion Rights Freedom Ride going around the country to raise awareness about new state laws that are challenging reproductive health rights.
Monday, August 5, 1-2pm
Women's Magazine with Global Val
KPFA 94.1 & kpfa.org
*There are several ways to listen LIVE, but you can always go to kpfa.org > archives > search the date > Women's Magazine...voila!
KPFA 94.1 FM
KPFB 89.3 FM
Comcast Digital Cable 967
iPhone: Public Radio App
Android: TuneIn Radio App
WebOS: Public Radio App
KPFA Live Stream Channel: kpfa.org
*Podcasts/archive will be posted on kpfa.org and kpfawomensmag.blogspot.com
PEACE & THANK YOU,
GLOBAL VAL
Radio Producer
Mutiny Radio & KPFA 94.1
www.globalval.blogspot.com
Women's Magazine with Global Val
KPFA 94.1 & kpfa.org
TUNE IN to this important two-part show that will address a range of women's reproductive health issues.
If you missed the show, you can go to the directly to the archive HERE!
Part I: Harvesting Human Eggs & International Surrogacy: Risks to Health & Human Rights
Discussing California AB 926 (on Governor Brown's desk as of August 5th): A bill that would repeal the current limits on compensation for women who 'donate' their eggs to research, and elevate it to $5-10K. Framed as a 'women's equity' bill, it neglects the health risks of invasive egg donation procedures. We'll discuss the history of this legislation, the health risks - as seen in the acclaimed documentary Eggsploitation - as well the legal argument against harvesting human eggs & the under-regulated industry of international surrogacy.
Featured Guests:
- Diane Tober, PhD, Assoc. Executive Director of the Center for Genetics and Society
- Jennifer Lahl, Executive Producer & Director of the Award Winning documentary Eggsploitation: The Fertility Industry has a Dirty Little Secret - www.eggsploitation.com
- Mona Lisa Wallace, Esq.
AB 926 is going to be on Governor Jerry Brown's desk as of Monday, August 5th 2013, where he has 12 days to sign it, veto it or let it pass into law without a signature. To contact the Governor, you can write to his aide: lark.park@gov.ca.gov
Part 2: Reports from the Abortions Rights Freedom Ride
The first in a series of regular updates on KPFA Women's Magazine directly from the Abortion Rights Freedom Ride going around the country to raise awareness about new state laws that are challenging reproductive health rights.
Monday, August 5, 1-2pm
Women's Magazine with Global Val
KPFA 94.1 & kpfa.org
*There are several ways to listen LIVE, but you can always go to kpfa.org > archives > search the date > Women's Magazine...voila!
KPFA 94.1 FM
KPFB 89.3 FM
Comcast Digital Cable 967
iPhone: Public Radio App
Android: TuneIn Radio App
WebOS: Public Radio App
KPFA Live Stream Channel: kpfa.org
*Podcasts/archive will be posted on kpfa.org and kpfawomensmag.blogspot.com
PEACE & THANK YOU,
GLOBAL VAL
Radio Producer
Mutiny Radio & KPFA 94.1
www.globalval.blogspot.com
Monday, June 24, 2013
California Senate set to vote on AB 926: Selling Human Eggs for Research Despite RISKS to Women's Health
On Friday, June 28, 2013, 1-2pm, I'll be talking to Diane Tober, PhD, the Associate Executive Director of the Center for Genetics and Society. We'll be discussing AB 926, currently being debated in the California Senate, which seeks to expand the market in human eggs by paying women for their eggs for research. This bill is coming up for a vote despite growing evidence of serious short and long-term health risks for young women.
Please join us on Women's Magazine (Mutiny Radio) for this important conversation so that you can get the knowledge you need to contact your State representative re: AB 926.
Friday, June 28, 2013
1-2pm
www.mutinyradio.org (aka: www.pcrcollective.org)
LIVE & Podcast
Thank you,
Global Val
Please join us on Women's Magazine (Mutiny Radio) for this important conversation so that you can get the knowledge you need to contact your State representative re: AB 926.
Friday, June 28, 2013
1-2pm
www.mutinyradio.org (aka: www.pcrcollective.org)
LIVE & Podcast
Thank you,
Global Val
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