Abstract

SummaryIn this autoethnographic photo essay, written from the perspective of the first author, we dwell upon the loss of his brother and explore how he came to new understandings of friendship, loss, and spirituality in Kashmir through the ensuing process of grief and mourning. The narrative is multifaceted and deeply personal; the text and the photographs spread across time and cities connected by disparate fragments of memory. The essay is presented in ways dictated by loss and grief and the memory of a person rather than as an afterthought. We preserve the jagged edges and fragmentary form of such emotions to reflect the affective and visual response to this loss.

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