Ashley Thompson
University of London
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Diacritics | 2013
Ashley Thompson
The goal is two-fold: to lay an interpretative ground for writing a history of post-genocide Cambodian art, and to suggest ways in which this particular art history is symptomatic of tensions at work more generally in contemporary art and art institutions. The turn of the twenty-first century saw the coalescence of a certain art scene in Cambodia: a loose group of artists and institutions with a number of shared themes, references and outlooks formed in the encounter between different, even opposing cultural paradigms, typically experienced and described as “Eastern” and “Western.” The fact that these paradigms are to some degree constituted in the encounter (or non-encounter) itself in no way negates the apparently natural inevitability of their constitutive role in the contemporary Cambodian art world. On the one hand, much Cambodian art of the past decades has been produced in response to largely external demands that Cambodians assume responsibility for the Khmer Rouge genocide as an historico-political event with traumatic effects on societal, cultural as well as individual levels. Born in part of a perceived absence of Cambodian memory-work, these demands are made or imposed on Cambodia most directly through international initiatives for democracy and justice. The association explicitly made in these demands between a certain treatment of memory regarding the genocide and democratic political rehabilitation is firmly grounded in the experience of the Shoah in Europe and its Euro-American commemorative aftermath. On the other hand, the art has evolved in relation to the historical specifics of the genocide in Cambodia—specifics which themselves have international dimensions—and in response to domestic political and cultural demands. Most pertinent are the ways in which Theravadin Buddhist aspects of contemporary Cambodian society and its dominant cultural forms, characterized by theories and practices of subjectivity that differ significantly from those underpinning the now globalized discourses on democratization, inflect art production in this context.
The Journal of Asian Studies | 2002
Ashley Thompson; Toni Shapiro-Phim
New Literary History | 2006
Aliette Armel; Jacques Derrida; Hélène Cixous; Ashley Thompson
Archive | 1995
Qāṃṅ Jūlān; Eric Prenowitz; Ashley Thompson; Vann Molyvann
New Literary History | 1993
Ashley Thompson
Archive | 2004
Ashley Thompson
Archive | 2010
Ashley Thompson; Eric Prenowitz
Archive | 2008
Ashley Thompson
New Literary History | 2006
Ashley Thompson
Archive | 2000
Ashley Thompson