Beyond the National Frame: Scenes from the Indo-Pak Border
24.10.’25
24.10.’25
FSW Lecture & screening by Natasha Raheja (Cornell University)
In this talk, I present my use of formal filmic techniques across two works to advance a visual argument about mobility and borders in South Asia. Borders are readily made legible through visual representations and material practices such as maps, fences, walls, passports, flags, news coverage, and the like. But what happens when one shuffles the narrative? I dice, splice, and recombine images of borders to generate a picture of the border that is not amenable to figurative absorption. Mainstream representations of the India-Pakistan border emphasize polarity, but I show that the border is a continuous space even as it is a marker of discontinuity. Specifically, my stylistic use of juxtaposition, montage, glitch, and split-screen exposes reductions and excesses of the nation-state order. Drawing on long-term ethnographic fieldwork in the Thar Desert region, I will screen from A Gregarious Species (2023, 9 min) and Kitne Passports? (in-production) to convey how, like the filmic cut, the border produces a shared and segmented space. Culling together found footage and composing my own images, I argue that working within the visual medium itself can unravel mental pictures about the fixity of borders.
Friday 24th October 10:00 to 12:00 AM
Participation is free, but online registration is mandatory.