Scarcity in Visual Memory: Creating a Mural of Sylvia Pankhurst

Publication date

2023-08-01

Authors

Vlessing, ClaraORCID 0000-0003-3087-5214ISNI 0000000507779931

Editors

Rigney, Ann
Smits, Thomas

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

This chapter looks at the “premediation” (Erll & Rigney, 2009) of a mural of the early 20th-century activist Sylvia Pankhurst and considers a number of photographs that it remediates, asking the question: How did these images end up here? The chapter follows the images in relation to broader characteristics of Pankhurst’s remembrance, exploring the long and often complicated pathways they take to become carriers of cultural memory. This exploration reveals the many different forms of political or aesthetic attachment behind the mural, which themselves are shaped by institutional, financial, or technological constraints and possibilities, and demonstrates that even in a culture of “post-scarcity” (Hoskins, 2018) and supposed imagistic abundance the visual memory of activism is still governed by scarcity.

Keywords

visual memory, activism, Sylvia Pankhurst, mural, scarcity principle, premediation

Citation

Vlessing, C 2023, Scarcity in Visual Memory : Creating a Mural of Sylvia Pankhurst. in A Rigney & T Smits (eds), The Visual Memory of Protest. Amsterdam University Press, pp. 115-131. https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.5610579.9