Postcolonialism, Time, and Body-Worn Cameras

Amanda Glasbeek, K. Roots, Mariful Alam
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper draws on postcolonial temporal analysis to make sense of police use of body-worn cameras (BWCs). We argue that the potential of BWCs to make racist policing visible, as originally hoped, is compromised by the inability of “real-time” video to capture the complexity of historical and on-going colonial relations. Drawing on postcolonial literary and visual theory, and especially Homi Bhabha’s (2004) postcolonial analysis of “belated-ness” and Andrea Smith’s (2015) anti-colonial analysis of “not-seeing,” we argue that BWCs reproduce a white settler gaze in which the complex histories of colonialism become temporally incommensurate with real-time images of policing social order.
后殖民主义、时间和随身相机
本文利用后殖民时期的时间分析来理解警察使用随身摄像机(BWCs)。我们认为,由于“实时”视频无法捕捉历史和正在进行的殖民关系的复杂性,生物武器使种族主义警务可见的潜力,如最初所希望的那样,受到了损害。利用后殖民文学和视觉理论,特别是霍米·巴巴(2004)对“迟来性”的后殖民分析和安德里亚·史密斯(2015)对“不看到”的反殖民分析,我们认为BWCs再现了一种白人定居者的凝视,在这种凝视中,殖民主义的复杂历史在时间上与维持社会秩序的实时图像不适应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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