In Visible Presence: Soviet Afterlives in Family Photos - a book by Olga Shevchenko and Oksana Sarkisova is out now

October 4, 2023

CEU IAS alumna Dr Olga Shevchenko (Paul H. Hunn '55 Professor in Social Studies at Williams College, Junior EURIAS Fellow 2011/12) and the co-founder of the CEU’s Visual Studies Platform Dr Oksana Sarkisova (Research Fellow at Blinken OSA and the director of the Verzio Documentary Film Festival) published a book drawing on their collaborative research on family photography and generational memories in Russia. In Visible Presence: Soviet Afterlives in Family Photos is released by MIT Press on October 3, 2023.

The book is an absorbing exploration of Soviet-era family photographs that demonstrates the singular power of the photographic image to command attention, resist closure, and complicate the meaning of the past. The book jacket reads:

A faded image of a family gathered at a festively served dinner table, raising their glasses in unison. A group of small children, sitting in orderly rows, with stuffed toys at their feet and a portrait of Lenin looming over their heads. A pensive older woman against a snowy landscape, her gaze directed lovingly at a tombstone. These are a few of the evocative images in In Visible Presence by Oksana Sarkisova and Olga Shevchenko, an exquisitely researched book that brings together photographs from Soviet-era family photo archives and investigates their afterlives in Russia.

In Visible Presence explores the photographic images' singular power to capture a fleeting moment by approaching them as points of contestation and possibility. Drawing on over a decade of fieldwork and interviews, as well as internet ethnography, media analysisand case studies, In Visible Presence offers a rich account of the role of family photography in creating communities of affect, enabling nostalgic longings, and processing memories of suffering, violence, and hardship. Together these photos evoke youthful aspirations, dashed hopes, and moral compromises, as well as the long legacy of silence that was passed down from grandparents to parents to children.

With more than 250 black and white photos, In Visible Presence is an astonishing journey into domestic photography, family memory, and the ongoing debate over the meaning of the Soviet past that is as timely and powerful today as it has ever been.

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