Dispatch: Reenacting the loop. Notes on conflict and historiography
In the first in a series of dispatches from the summer school 'Landscape (post) Conflict' reseacher Giulia Terralavoro, following her time on the island of Ireland, proposes thinking of post conflict societies as 'temporal loops'.
There was a multitude of British flags on the unionist side of West Belfast. Red, blue and white dominated our perception of the space, creating a phantasmagoria where the houses signified and represented conflicting and collective feelings. This need for self-representation and exhibition of belonging to the United Kingdom was palpable. Something similar occurred on the nationalist side of West Belfast: green, white and orange of Éire mixed with the colours of the Palestinian flag, exactly how the blue of the Union Jack was placed next to that of the Israeli flags. Present and past overlapped, something so far from a Western perception of history: linear, straightforward, Hegelian and progressive. ‘Time’ and ‘place’ were deconstructed on both sides, embracing in different ways intersectional, international struggle.
West Belfast during the field trip of July 8, 2025. Photo: Giulia Terralavoro
However, this phantasmagoria was divided by a Peace Line, a wall whose physical presence took all of us by surprise. What made everything even more complex was not its perpetuation in the present, its continued existence – it would be naïve to assume that the definition of ‘post-conflict society’ applied to Belfast in a literal sense, as the city embodied an agonistic arena where feelings were far from dormant – but the fact that it had opening and closing hours. At 8:30pm on weekdays, at 6:30pm at weekends and public holidays, the wall divided West Belfast again: a wound stitched with barbed wire until it bled out once again.
The gate of the Peace Line in Belfast during the field trip of July 8, 2025. Photo: Giulia Terralavoro
Although it is difficult to control time, exercising such control is the real oppression of subjectivity. Factories are a prime example of this: consider how factory owners manipulated clocks to make people work overtime. They controlled the workers’ perception of time and, consequently, controlled them as subjects. This is what neoliberal hegemony does: it subjects time to capitalist control, making no alternative seem possible, as Mark Fisher reminded us.
This is also reflected in our perception of the past. Walter Benjamin had already underlined how it was important for historians to maintain a certain distance from the past in order to avoid legitimising history’s course and especially the oppression it entails.1 Capitalism’s control of time and history is exactly a legitimising one, an attempt to show how there are no other possibilities for freedom. But we can also reclaim time.
This was evident in the Summer School and, especially, in one of the artworks we have discussed. A companion to our Summer School, repeated in a loop on IMMA’s Living Canvas, was Ammar Bouras’ Traces, 24°3’55”N 5°3’23”E (2011-2022). As we passed every day in front of the Living Canvas as we entered IMMA for our workshops and talks, we were greeted by slow voices speaking tamahaq and providing their own testimonies of this collective trauma. The video, previously presented at the 12th Berlin Biennale, is the result of the artist’s research on the Béryl incident, a nuclear test carried out by the French in Algeria, and its impact on the local population. It is a reflection on French colonial rule of Algeria and the role of the Algerian state itself, as the story of what happened on May 1st, 1962, is yet to be fully accounted for.
The artist collected five testimonies – four from Algerian Targuis whose lives were impacted by the Béryl incident, and one from a French chemist who worked for the French army at the time of the explosion – to build a counter-historiography of what happened. Professor Jill Jarvis, who presented us the artwork, reminded us that it was very difficult to reconstruct this history from a traditional historiographic approach, as there were no records on the French side.
The archive is indeed a powerful institution, not only for what it contains – the kind of history that the state wishes to narrate – but also for what it lacks: the archive’s mute voices, the echoes of those who were erased by hegemonic narration. This is what struck me.
Seeing Bouras’ work reminded me of Belfast. There is a kind of memory that cannot be found in archives, a counter-hegemonic account of history that goes from murals to oral testimonies. I searched the words to better convey what I felt and then I realized: post-conflict societies are temporal loops. ‘Loop’ is here intended as a past that repeats itself circularly, a violent and traumatic embodied reenactment. What Abbas proposed with his work was a decolonisation of a forgotten history by contrasting archival and official accounts – or lack thereof – with a reenacted memory, as evident not only in the artwork - presented itself as a loop - but in the very way the Targuis recounted their experiences. They repeated and emphasised every word. It was a circular narrative, an affirmation and reclamation of testimony. Trauma was rehearsed, re-performed and re-embodied. The past became alive again in a deconstruction of the Hegelian and linear approach to historiography. The loop was the artist’s way of reclaiming forgotten histories, to affirm this collective trauma and demand attention and justice. This is what I also found in the way the walls in West Belfast close and open, negotiating the present to further reclaim the contemporaneity of this collective trauma.
Finally, the loop was a kind of affective and embodied memory that worked through repetition and reenactment as reclaiming counter-hegemonic strategies. Vanessa Agnew talked about reenactment as a kind of history from below2, an anomaly compared to traditional historiographical practice which gives voice and space to marginalised communities: if I repeat my story constantly, you will have to hear me and my repetition will deconstruct a linear past which removes responsibility in the present to take into account past traumas.
The a-historicity of the loop signifies the reclamation of the value of embodied and personal experience, fighting against the regimes of the archive. Its proposal is not only an act of voice giving for the people whose stories were unheard and forgotten, but the construction of a different past to create a possibility of future against capitalism and one of its tools, colonialism, and its fatalistic view of collectivity.
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–MSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU
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–IMMANCAD
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Related contributions and publications
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Reading List: Summer School, Landscape (post) Conflict
Summer School - Landscape (post) ConflictSchoolsLand RelationsPast in the PresentIMMANCAD -
Decolonial aesthesis: weaving each other
Charles Esche, Rolando Vázquez, Teresa Cos RebolloLand RelationsClimate -
Climate Forum I – Readings
Nkule MabasoEN esLand RelationsClimateHDK-Valand -
…and the Earth along. Tales about the making, remaking and unmaking of the world.
Martin PogačarLand RelationsClimatePast in the Present -
Art for Radical Ecologies Manifesto
Institute of Radical ImaginationLand RelationsClimateInstitute of Radical Imagination -
Ecologising Museums
Land Relations -
Climate: Our Right to Breathe
Land RelationsClimate -
A Letter Inside a Letter: How Labor Appears and Disappears
Marwa ArsaniosLand RelationsClimate -
Glossary of Common Knowledge, Vol. 2
Schools -
Glossary of Common Knowledge
Schools -
Seeds Shall Set Us Free II
Munem WasifLand RelationsClimate -
Discomfort at Dinner: The role of food work in challenging empire
Mary FawzyLand RelationsSituated Organizations -
Indra's Web
Vandana SinghLand RelationsPast in the PresentClimate -
Towards Collective Learning, or, Decompartmentalizing Education
María Berríos, Fran MM Cabeza de Vaca, Yolande Zola Zoli van der Heide, Nick AikensSchoolsSituated Organizations -
En dag kommer friheten att finnas
Françoise Vergès, Maddalena FragnitoEN svInternationalismsLand RelationsClimateInstitute of Radical Imagination -
Art and Materialisms: At the intersection of New Materialisms and Operaismo
Emanuele BragaLand RelationsClimateInstitute of Radical Imagination -
Dispatch: Harvesting Non-Western Epistemologies (ongoing)
Adelina LuftLand RelationsSchoolsClimatetranzit.ro -
Dispatch: From the Eleventh Session of Non-Western Technologies for the Good Life
Ana KunLand RelationsSchoolstranzit.ro -
Reading list: School of Common Knowledge 2024
School of Common KnowledgeSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU -
Dispatch: Practicing Conviviality
Ana BarbuClimateSchoolsLand Relationstranzit.ro -
Dispatch: Notes on Separation and Conviviality
Raluca PopaLand RelationsSchoolsSituated OrganizationsClimatetranzit.ro -
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Ovidiu Ţichindeleanu, Raluca VoineaLand RelationsClimateSituated Organizationstranzit.ro -
Dispatch: A Shared Dialogue
Irina Botea Bucan, Jon DeanLand RelationsSchoolsClimatetranzit.ro -
Art, Radical Ecologies and Class Composition: On the possible alliance between historical and new materialisms
Marco BaravalleLand RelationsClimateInstitute of Radical Imagination -
‘Territorios en resistencia’, Artistic Perspectives from Latin America
Rosa Jijón & Francesco Martone (A4C), Sofía Acosta Varea, Boloh Miranda Izquierdo, Anamaría GarzónLand RelationsClimateInstitute of Radical Imagination -
Dispatch: In between the lessons. Staying together in uncertain times, laughing in the face of trouble, and disobeying; the future belongs to us
Antonela SoleničkiSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU -
Dispatch: The Commonsverse and Situated Organisations – or why the era of big institutions will come to an end
Denise PolliniSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU -
Dispatch: A Buriti Tree
Lucas PrettiSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU -
Unhinging the Dual Machine: The Politics of Radical Kinship for a Different Art Ecology
Federica TimetoLand RelationsClimateInstitute of Radical Imagination -
Cultivating Abundance
Åsa SonjasdotterLand RelationsClimatePast in the Present -
Poner el nombre a una causa en tierra extraña
Dagmary Olívar Graterol, Paola de la Vega VelasteguiEN esSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMuseo Reina Sofia -
Dispatch: To whom it may concern – the voice of the censor and re-calibrating words as an act of survival
AnonymousSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU -
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Leonida KovačSchoolsInternationalismsSituated OrganizationsMSU ZagrebModerna galerijaZRC SAZU -
Reading list - Summer School: Our Many Easts
Summer School - Our Many EastsSchoolsPast in the PresentModerna galerija -
Climate Forum II – Readings
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Klei eten is geen eetstoornis
Zayaan KhanEN nl frLand RelationsClimatePast in the Present -
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Megan HoetgerSchoolsPast in the Present -
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Ava ZevopSchoolsPast in the Present -
Glöm ”aldrig mer”, det är alltid redan krig
Martin PogačarEN svLand RelationsPast in the Present -
Graduation
Koleka PutumaLand RelationsClimate -
Depression
Gargi BhattacharyyaLand RelationsClimate -
Climate Forum III – Readings
Yolande Zola Zoli van der HeideLand RelationsClimate -
Soils
Land RelationsClimateVan Abbemuseum -
Dispatch: There is grief, but there is also life
Cathryn KlastoLand RelationsClimate -
Dispatch: Care Work is Grief Work
Abril Cisneros RamírezLand RelationsClimate -
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Anela DumonjićSchoolsModerna galerija -
Taking Part. A Guide to Participatory Tools and Techniques
EN esSchoolsSituated OrganizationsMuseo Reina Sofia -
Atención: participar en el Museo de los Comunes
Fran MM Cabeza de VacaEN esSchoolsSituated Organizations -
Reading List: Lives of Animals
Joanna ZielińskaLand RelationsClimateM HKA -
Sonic Room: Translating Animals
Joanna ZielińskaLand RelationsClimate -
Encounters with Ecologies of the Savannah – Aadaajii laɗɗe
Katia GolovkoLand RelationsClimate -
Trans Species Solidarity in Dark Times
Fahim AmirEN trLand RelationsClimate -
Solidarity is the Tenderness of the Species – Cohabitation its Lived Exploration
Fahim AmirEN trLand Relations -
Dispatch: Reenacting the loop. Notes on conflict and historiography
Giulia TerralavoroSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Dispatch: Haunting, cataloging and the phenomena of disintegration
Coco GoranSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Dispatch: Landescape – bending words or what a new terminology on post-conflict could be
Amanda CarneiroSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Dispatch: Landscape (Post) Conflict – Mediating the In-Between
Janine DavidsonSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Dispatch: Excerpts from the six days and sixty one pages of the black sketchbook
Sabine El ChamaaSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Dispatch: Withstanding. Notes on the material resonance of the archive and its practice
Giulio GonellaSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Climate Forum IV – Readings
Merve BedirLand RelationsHDK-Valand -
Land Relations: Editorial
L'Internationale Online Editorial BoardLand Relations -
Schools: Editorial
L'Internationale Online Editorial BoardSchools -
Dispatch: Between Pages and Borders – (post) Reflection on Summer School ‘Landscape (post) Conflict’
Daria RiabovaSchoolsLand RelationsIMMANCAD -
Between Care and Violence: The Dogs of Istanbul
Mine YıldırımLand Relations -
Reading list: October School. Reimagining Institutions
October SchoolSchoolsSituated OrganizationsClimateMSU Zagreb -
The Debt of Settler Colonialism and Climate Catastrophe
Nataša Petrešin-Bachelez, Olivier Marbœuf, Samia Henni, Marie-Hélène Villierme and Mililani GanivetLand Relations