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Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985

This thesis takes as its starting point three photographic images of the bodies of Jackie Quin and Leon Meyer laid out in a mortuary in Maseru, following their assassination in a cross border raid into Lesotho by South African security force operatives in December 1985. In their afterlives the image...

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Main Author: Duggan, Jo-Anne
Other Authors: Field, Sean
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Historical Studies 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Duggan, Jo-Anne
author2 Field, Sean
author_browse Duggan, Jo-Anne
Field, Sean
author_facet Field, Sean
Duggan, Jo-Anne
author_sort Duggan, Jo-Anne
collection Thesis
description This thesis takes as its starting point three photographic images of the bodies of Jackie Quin and Leon Meyer laid out in a mortuary in Maseru, following their assassination in a cross border raid into Lesotho by South African security force operatives in December 1985. In their afterlives the images, first circulated in news media, have inspired a novel and a song, been used to illustrate a poem and an educational text and repurposed in publications, documentary films, exhibitions, and on social media. Drawing on oral history dialogues with photographers, journalists, writers, artists activists, archivists and exhibition curators, and on literature on the intersection of visuality, psychology, narrative and memory studies, the thesis aims to track the way the images have been remembered, misremembered or forgotten over a period of almost four decades. Interlocutors were asked to focus on, and speak about, the images as they came into view in memory, rather than on a printed surface or a digital screen. This highlighted the complex entanglement of visuality, affect, narration and memory. An analysis of the dialogues suggest that the images live on in memory as objects of affect rather than for their indexical status. Interlocutors remembered their encounters with the images in precise detail, but their memories of the event with which they were associated were vague. Speaking about remembered images blurred the boundaries between past and present, the self and other, affect and cognition, raising into consciousness deep-seated vulnerabilities, anxieties, grief, and regrets that might otherwise have remained unsaid. The dialogues also highlighted the stark differences between the images made by photographers and those encountered in the atemporal and subjective domain of memory, constantly susceptible to embellishment, erasure or reconfiguration. Listening and watching as interlocutors recalled the images, and described them in language and gestures, offered insights into the way in which the conscious and unconscious collude to shape and frame images seen in the mind's eye. This thesis argues that oral history dialogues produce intangible traces of the images of Jackie and Leon, as well as other remembered photographs and mental images. These vestiges constitute a complex archive that loops between past/present, personal/political, and individual/collective memory and brings into consciousness the almost unthinkable, unseeable, unsayable and unrepresentable.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-07-01T04:02:12.714Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Department of Historical Studies
publisherStr Department of Historical Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/43317 Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985 Duggan, Jo-Anne Field, Sean Historical Studies This thesis takes as its starting point three photographic images of the bodies of Jackie Quin and Leon Meyer laid out in a mortuary in Maseru, following their assassination in a cross border raid into Lesotho by South African security force operatives in December 1985. In their afterlives the images, first circulated in news media, have inspired a novel and a song, been used to illustrate a poem and an educational text and repurposed in publications, documentary films, exhibitions, and on social media. Drawing on oral history dialogues with photographers, journalists, writers, artists activists, archivists and exhibition curators, and on literature on the intersection of visuality, psychology, narrative and memory studies, the thesis aims to track the way the images have been remembered, misremembered or forgotten over a period of almost four decades. Interlocutors were asked to focus on, and speak about, the images as they came into view in memory, rather than on a printed surface or a digital screen. This highlighted the complex entanglement of visuality, affect, narration and memory. An analysis of the dialogues suggest that the images live on in memory as objects of affect rather than for their indexical status. Interlocutors remembered their encounters with the images in precise detail, but their memories of the event with which they were associated were vague. Speaking about remembered images blurred the boundaries between past and present, the self and other, affect and cognition, raising into consciousness deep-seated vulnerabilities, anxieties, grief, and regrets that might otherwise have remained unsaid. The dialogues also highlighted the stark differences between the images made by photographers and those encountered in the atemporal and subjective domain of memory, constantly susceptible to embellishment, erasure or reconfiguration. Listening and watching as interlocutors recalled the images, and described them in language and gestures, offered insights into the way in which the conscious and unconscious collude to shape and frame images seen in the mind's eye. This thesis argues that oral history dialogues produce intangible traces of the images of Jackie and Leon, as well as other remembered photographs and mental images. These vestiges constitute a complex archive that loops between past/present, personal/political, and individual/collective memory and brings into consciousness the almost unthinkable, unseeable, unsayable and unrepresentable. 2026-06-12T13:00:22Z 2026-06-12T13:00:22Z 2026 2026-06-12T12:58:52Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43317 en eng application/pdf Department of Historical Studies Faculty of Humanities Unversity of Cape Town
spellingShingle Historical Studies
Duggan, Jo-Anne
Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985
title_full Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985
title_fullStr Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985
title_full_unstemmed Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985
title_short Memory and the afterlives of images: Jacqueline Quin and Leon Meyer, Maseru, 20 December 1985
title_sort memory and the afterlives of images jacqueline quin and leon meyer maseru 20 december 1985
topic Historical Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/43317
work_keys_str_mv AT dugganjoanne memoryandtheafterlivesofimagesjacquelinequinandleonmeyermaseru20december1985