Book contents
- Cold War Asia
- Cold War Asia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Reframing Non-alignment
- 2 In the Image of Imelda
- 3 Meeting of the Kings
- 4 Conquering the World
- 5 Between Style and Substance
- 6 A Photograph with Two Stories
- 7 Waxwork Wars
- 8 Cosmic Envoy
- 9 A Diplomatic Image and Its Afterlife
- 10 Picturing Power
- Index
6 - A Photograph with Two Stories
Lisa Larsen and the Bandung Conference of 1955
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2025
- Cold War Asia
- Cold War Asia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Reframing Non-alignment
- 2 In the Image of Imelda
- 3 Meeting of the Kings
- 4 Conquering the World
- 5 Between Style and Substance
- 6 A Photograph with Two Stories
- 7 Waxwork Wars
- 8 Cosmic Envoy
- 9 A Diplomatic Image and Its Afterlife
- 10 Picturing Power
- Index
Summary
The striking image of three local Chinese women spectators at the Bandung Conference of 1955 was taken by Lisa Larsen, who was a photographer commissioned by LIFE magazine to cover the conference. What does this photograph tell us about international diplomacy? Was it a coincidence that the female photographer happened to take one of the most visually arresting photographs of women as diplomatic spectators? This chapter proposes to probe further the significance of gender in constructing images of international diplomacy. In general, visual sources of international diplomacy tend to portray women in multiple capacities as actors on the international stage. However, this stands in stark contrast to textual sources, which reveal very little female agency, mostly due to the narrowly defined notions of who constitutes a diplomatic actor in traditional approaches to studying diplomacy. Elsewhere, the author has argued that the invisibility of women in diplomacy can in itself be seen as a performative stance. In this chapter, she explores how we can ‘recover’ the lost female presence in diplomacy by privileging the female gaze, through the iconic female photographer.
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- Information
- Cold War AsiaA Visual History of Global Diplomacy, pp. 126 - 144Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025