The Returning Hero and the Exiled Villain: The Image of the Armenian in Ottoman Society, 1908-1916

Authors

  • David Low University of Michigan

Abstract

This essay explores the evolution of photographic constructions of Armenian identity and the place of Armenians within Ottoman society through a comparison of images made in the aftermath of the revolution of 1908 with those produced during the 1915-16 period. In the earlier period, recurring motifs of return and reconciliation can be discerned, with there being pictured a new, inclusive Ottoman society. While Armenians were depicted as a vital element within post-revolutionary society, the photographic medium simultaneously identified those that that were thought not to belong and was complicit in their social exclusion. During the Armenian Genocide, photography was employed in a similar visual strategy, with Armenians finding themselves in a changed position, being targeted by the lens and marked as lying outside of a reconceptualised Ottoman society.

Author Biography

David Low, University of Michigan

Manoogian Post-doctoral Fellow with the Armenian Studies Program at the University of Michigan. He was awarded his PhD in 2015 by the Courtauld Institute of Art, London, for a thesis on photography during the late Ottoman period and the Armenian Genocide.

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Published

2016-11-15

How to Cite

Low, D. (2016). The Returning Hero and the Exiled Villain: The Image of the Armenian in Ottoman Society, 1908-1916. International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies, 3(1), 52–71. Retrieved from https://agmipublications.am/index.php/ijags/article/view/35