Abstract This article aims to discuss certain issues of the genocide in Cambodia, which occurred between 1975 and 1979, through the documentary Bophana, a Cambodian tragedy (1996), directed by Rithy Panh. At the center of the narrative is the correspondence established between the protagonist and Ly Sitha, her husband. For Panh, this correspondence represents the individual’s resistance to the Khmer Rouge regime by expressing two elements seen as harmful by the totalitarian State: love and culture.</p
The film The Missing Picture (Rithy Panh, 2013) hinges on a topic of the images of atrocity that ari...
Prostitution in contemporary Cambodia is historically linked to the violence of the Khmer Rouge regi...
Today, Cambodia houses one of the seven wonders of the world – the Angkor Wat. Beyond the splendor a...
This article focuses on Rithy Panh’s four documentaries on Cambodia’s traumatic past: Bophana, une t...
The Cambodian director and writer, Rithy Panh, born in 1962 in Phnom Penh, is a survivor of the geno...
Perpetrator images are those that are part of the machinery of destruction (torture, genocide…). Thi...
Le présent article cherche à explorer l’œuvre cinématographique de Rithy Panh pour en comprendre les...
Revisit the past, search for traces, reframe painful experiences, learn from them, resume the word, ...
This article focuses on the images used over four decades to represent the Cambodian genocide in pho...
The majority of Rithy Panh’s movies focus on the aftermath of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime in Ca...
Examination of the aesthetics of testimony in Rithy Panh's documentary S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing...
The article seeks to invest in the representation of the heinous and (in) translatability of represe...
In the autobiographical documentary The Missing Picture, the Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh tells hi...
The article is centred on the relationship between visual imaginary and testimonies, the way the for...
Rithy Panh's film S-21. The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine (2003) was the result of a three- year shoot...
The film The Missing Picture (Rithy Panh, 2013) hinges on a topic of the images of atrocity that ari...
Prostitution in contemporary Cambodia is historically linked to the violence of the Khmer Rouge regi...
Today, Cambodia houses one of the seven wonders of the world – the Angkor Wat. Beyond the splendor a...
This article focuses on Rithy Panh’s four documentaries on Cambodia’s traumatic past: Bophana, une t...
The Cambodian director and writer, Rithy Panh, born in 1962 in Phnom Penh, is a survivor of the geno...
Perpetrator images are those that are part of the machinery of destruction (torture, genocide…). Thi...
Le présent article cherche à explorer l’œuvre cinématographique de Rithy Panh pour en comprendre les...
Revisit the past, search for traces, reframe painful experiences, learn from them, resume the word, ...
This article focuses on the images used over four decades to represent the Cambodian genocide in pho...
The majority of Rithy Panh’s movies focus on the aftermath of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime in Ca...
Examination of the aesthetics of testimony in Rithy Panh's documentary S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing...
The article seeks to invest in the representation of the heinous and (in) translatability of represe...
In the autobiographical documentary The Missing Picture, the Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh tells hi...
The article is centred on the relationship between visual imaginary and testimonies, the way the for...
Rithy Panh's film S-21. The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine (2003) was the result of a three- year shoot...
The film The Missing Picture (Rithy Panh, 2013) hinges on a topic of the images of atrocity that ari...
Prostitution in contemporary Cambodia is historically linked to the violence of the Khmer Rouge regi...
Today, Cambodia houses one of the seven wonders of the world – the Angkor Wat. Beyond the splendor a...