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dc.contributor.authorParker, K
dc.contributor.authorMoore, S
dc.contributor.editorKrižić Roban S
dc.contributor.editorŠverko A
dc.date.accessioned2023-10-12T03:47:41Z
dc.date.available2023-10-12T03:47:41Z
dc.date.issued2023-09-27
dc.identifier.isbn9789461665195
dc.identifier.other1
dc.identifier.urihttps://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/handle/10026.1/21382
dc.descriptionOpen access e-Book chapter pdf uploaded to Pearl repository
dc.description.abstract

The chapter explores the politics of emptiness through the 20-minute essay film, Father-land (2018), made collaboratively by the authors, Stuart Moore and Kayla Parker, through an artist research residency hosted by the Nicosia Municipal Arts centre (NiMAC) in Cyprus. The story of Nicosia itself unfolds through a montage of views of the fractured landscape of the Buffer Zone and its accompanying ambient soundscape, while the voices of two unseen narrators share their childhood recollections and reflect on im- ages of conflict and the legacies of colonialism, occupation, and the Cold War.

The film interweaves our personal memories as children, growing up with fathers who served with the Royal Air Force (RAF) on the island, with our lived experience of present-day Nicosia, as we explored the suspended animation of the politically charged Buffer Zone, the demilitarised strip of land controlled by the United Nations that has partitioned Cyprus from east to west since the military conflict of 1974. Our principal residency period was for four weeks in November and December 2016. This followed the ‘Brexit’ referendum on 23 June 2016, when the UK voted to leave the European Union. For us, our imminent – and unwelcome – isolation from the continent of Europe and England’s resurgent nationalistic ideology resonated with our childhood memories of separation and displacement, living in temporary homes in various RAF camps, and our day-to-day experience as temporary residents of Nicosia, the only divided capital city in Europe. We returned for a second, week-long residency period in spring 2018 to record additional locations, sound, and the narration for the film. Father-land was exhibited at NiMAC, close to where the film was made. Father-land creates an autoethnographic memory archive that brings together the personal and the political in our post-Brexit and increasingly unstable times.

dc.format.extent12
dc.format.extent33-62
dc.publisherLeuven University Press
dc.relation.ispartofWatching, Waiting: The Photographic Representation of Empty Places
dc.subjectBuffer Zone
dc.subjectchildhood
dc.subjectconflict
dc.subjectCyprus
dc.subjectmemory
dc.subjectpostcolonial
dc.titleSeparation Anxiety: Filming the Nicosia Buffer Zone
dc.typechapter
plymouth.author-urlhttps://www.plymouth.ac.uk/staff/kayla-parker
plymouth.publisher-urlhttps://lup.be/products/179441
plymouth.publication-statusPublished online
dc.identifier.doi10.11116/9789461665195
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Business
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Business|School of Art, Design and Architecture
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2021 Researchers by UoA
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|Users by role|Academics
plymouth.organisational-group|Plymouth|REF 2021 Researchers by UoA|UoA32 Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory
dc.publisher.placeLeuven, Belgium
dc.date.updated2023-10-12T03:47:40Z
dc.rights.embargodate2024-3-12
dc.rights.embargoperiod
rioxxterms.versionofrecord10.11116/9789461665195


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