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Representations of disaster victimhood: Framing suffering and loss after the 1934 Bihar-Nepal earthquake

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2022

Eleonor Marcussen*
Affiliation:
Department of Cultural Sciences, and LNU Centre for Concurrences in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies, Linnaeus University, Växjö, Sweden
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Abstract

This article seeks to address a thematic thread that remains relatively unexplored in historical disaster research—victimhood—through an analysis of publications by disaster relief funds and their supporters in the aftermath of the 1934 earthquake in Bihar in northern India. By examining the representations of victimhood, I aim to explore the historical significance of perceptions and constructions of victimhood in the late colonial period. Based on photographs, illustrations, and descriptions of suffering in images and texts, the article suggests that constructions of victimhood effectively relied on imagery that contained, on the one hand, an absence of bodies and, on the other, a feminized anthropomorphization of suffering. The narratives underlying such depictions of earthquake victims are based on a constitution of victimhood that relied on contemporary historical and culturally founded imageries. The analysis of images and texts focuses on how representations of disaster victims were effective in communicating suffering to audiences. I tentatively argue that historically and culturally founded tropes of what constituted a victim formed along two narratives of victimhood that appealed to a colonial and a nationalist readership respectively. These conceptualizations of victimhood formed the basis for collecting aid for relief and reconstruction, rather than the loss of life, dispossession, social marginalization, and displacement suffered by victims of the earthquake.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re- use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press.
Figure 0

Figure 1. Cover of Devastated Bihar: an account of havoc caused by the earthquake of 15th January, 1934 and relief operation conducted by the Committee, published by the BCRC in 1934.

Source: Author’s collection.
Figure 1

Figure 2. Cover of ‘Earthquake Number: Which hand is yours’, special issue by the Chronicle-Sentinel. The editors were Syed Abdullah Brelvi and Benjamin Guy Horniman.

Source: Courtesy of Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Library, Patna.
Figure 2

Figure 3. ‘Where lies dead under the debris the family of Prof. S. Bose of G. B. B. College, Muzaffarpur.’

Source: Chronicle-Sentinel, ‘Earthquake Number’. Courtesy of Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Library, Patna.
Figure 3

Figure 4. ‘The Agony of Bihar: The Nation’s Call’, image by Pulin Bihari Dutt, Chronicle-Sentinel, ‘Earthquake Number’, p. 2.

Source: Courtesy of Khuda Bakhsh Oriental Library, Patna
Figure 4

Figure 5. Cover of ‘Record of the Great Indian Earthquake’, a special issue on the earthquake by the Statesman.

Source: Author’s collection.
Figure 5

Figure 6. ‘The Destruction of Uninsured Homes of the People, and (…)’.

Source: Illustrated Weekly of India, 18 March 1934, p. 15.