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Sepia-tinted Memory
Outlook
|April 21, 2025
Framing Portraits, Binding Albums highlights the startling absence of family photographs in academic discourse in India and underlines the importance of deconstructing them as artifacts of social studies
In a single-room accommodation, amid bare minimum necessities for a family of three, stood a wooden cabinet. Waist high and slightly worn down, with a loose panel on the side, the cabinet used to be my go-to spot during the hot and leisurely afternoons of summer vacations. Being in a family of working parents, my afternoons would often be spent on self-assigned projects of rummaging through the bookshelves, or reading. Sometimes, the thick family albums kept amid the books peeped from the shelves.
The albums were myriad; their presentation of photos changing with their physical form. Some were elaborate, with photos of my mother from her college days, her friends, of her playing the sitar in a gathering of distant family members. There were photos of my father, on his way to getting married—his face, young, marked by the hardships of labour from his teenage years as a refugee, yet his bright eyes set him apart from the other young men in the photographs. I was there too, in that small room cramped with cheap furniture, covered with towels, with a paper sword in my hand.
These photos are a testament to the quiet resilience of a family and their idea of belonging. Marked in each photo stuck in these albums is an anthology of life lived, people coming and going, a reflection of both—what was and what was endured.
Family photographs, an asset often tucked away neatly in a corner of such cabinets in households across our country, (and Southeast Asia) have not been a part of mainstream academic discourse. A form of legitimate anthropological study material, these albums give a sense of preservation of both private and public memory.
In the book,
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