Trauma, Memory and Religion
Journal for Religion, Film and Media (JRFM), volume 4, issue 1 (2018), pp. 7-77
"How can we screen trauma? This question might lead the perception of documentary movies about atrocities in the 20th and 21st centuries, like S21 The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine (Rithy Panh, CAMB/FR 2003) about Cambodia, The Look of Silence (Joshua Oppenheimer, ID/DK 2014) about Indonesia or Das Radikal Böse about Nazi-Europe. The first concern emerge as we watch movies on atrocities is whether these artistic representations perhaps guide the public away from what “really happened”. There certainly is a huge gap between, on the one hand, the immediate experience of the event that lies behind the interpretative screening and, on the other hand, watching the director’s material while neither part nor ever having been part of the event. Yet often filmic representations are not intended to show what happened; instead they present case studies to be explored in the present. Rity Panh, director of S21, argued in an interview with Joshua Oppenheimer, that if we can’t distinguish between perpetrator and victim, it becomes impossible to mourn. For Panh, his film is more than historic interpretation or a perspective on memory; it poses the broad question of how we think about perpetrators and victims in multiple contexts. In S21 Panh shows how in post-genocide Cambodia perpetrators are confronted by one of their victims. The question of why they acted as they did is swiftly transformed into a question of how they did so. The confrontation is set in Tuol Sleng, a former high school in Pnhom Penh where torture was carried out during the Khmer Rouge regime. In films like S21, Das radikal Böse and The Act of Killing, one question continually resounds for the audience: Is this what we are as human beings? What appears on the screen therefore challenges the audience with a moral question: what would you do? It is this question, heard in the present, that makes movies like S21, Das radikal Böse and The Act of Killing so immediate. In a way they look to confront a public that might already know the language of human rights. Breaking through established idioms by portraying perpetrators in specific situations, sometimes with the perpetrators playing themselves as in S21 and The Act of Killing, seems a missionary purpose for these directors. Indeed, their movies are hardly about a past; they establish a critical link between past and present and break through the dichotomic simplicity of good guys and bad guys. But the questions raised by the movies are hardly open questions. Often the movies contain an inherent critique of genocidal violence and present humanistic perspectives on obedience. Mostly, these movies underline the humanity of the victims, seeking to give names, faces and biographies so that they are much more than just numbers." (Editorial, pages 7-8)
Trauma, Memory and Religion in Film. Editorial / Freek L Bakker and Lucien van Liere, 7
The Banality of Ghosts. Searching for Humanity with Joshua Oppenheimer in 'The Act of Killing' / Lucien van Liere, 15
Trauma and Conformity. Psychology in 'The Act of Killing' and 'Das radikal Böse' / Hessel J. Zondag, 35
Punishment and Crime. The Reverse Order of Causality in 'The White Ribbon' / Gerwin van der Pol, 47
Intercultural Perspectives on 'Das radikal Böse' and 'The Act of Killing': Similarities and Dissimilarities in Coping with Trauma in Indonesia and Germany, in Southeast Asia and Europe / Freek L Bakker, 63
The Banality of Ghosts. Searching for Humanity with Joshua Oppenheimer in 'The Act of Killing' / Lucien van Liere, 15
Trauma and Conformity. Psychology in 'The Act of Killing' and 'Das radikal Böse' / Hessel J. Zondag, 35
Punishment and Crime. The Reverse Order of Causality in 'The White Ribbon' / Gerwin van der Pol, 47
Intercultural Perspectives on 'Das radikal Böse' and 'The Act of Killing': Similarities and Dissimilarities in Coping with Trauma in Indonesia and Germany, in Southeast Asia and Europe / Freek L Bakker, 63