The talking witness documentary: remembrance and the politics of truth

Abstract
This article argues that the conventional talking witness documentary, by relying on memory of experience as evidence, employs an inherently conservative politics of truth. Using a recent Kurdish video,5 No.lu Cezaevi/Prison No. 5(Çayan Demirel, 2009), as a case study, it considers the opportunities and limitations of the talking witness form, as well as its appeals. The essay pays special attention to the documentary's use of ‘mimetic’ affective engagement to break into the moral and conceptual space of trauma, and the harrowing experiences of men and women who were incarcerated in the notorious Diyarbakır prison in eastern Turkey in the aftermath of the 1980 Turkishcoup d'état, thus endeavoring to, at once, fix and disseminate memories of a violent past that run counter to state-authored versions of that history.