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oapen-20.500.12657-623602024-03-28T08:18:15Z Chapter 10 Complicity in Commemoration Prade-Weiss, Juliane complicity, participation, implication, transgenerational trauma, remediation thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JH Sociology and anthropology::JHB Sociology thema EDItEUR::J Society and Social Sciences::JP Politics and government The chapter reads Maria Stepanova’s 2017 Памяти памяти (In Memory of Memory, 2021) in view of the boom of testimonies of involvement in twentieth-century mass violence in Central and Eastern European literatures. Why this interest now? Hypothesis is that the texts address convergences between past complicities and current forms of participation in the wrongdoings of neoliberalism. These issues are related, since justifications of past involvement established the terminology, narratives, and heuristics in which mass violence has been subsequently discussed, thus forming the frame for the negotiation of current problematic involvement. Stepanova’s text stands out from the large corpus of contemporary family history narratives. First, it inverts the common order of critical discourse, as the literary text discusses theoretical concepts of memory studies, most notably Hirsch’s “postmemory.” Secondly, this discussion challenges a Western bias of memory studies, where political violence is portrayed as a traumatizing element of a past era handed down through transgenerational transmission. Stepanova outlines that in Eastern Europe, the experience of totalitarian terror and mass violence spread over several eras and multiple generations, creating a “traumatic enfilade” that comprises even the narrator’s present. In Memory of Memory addresses the critical participation of analysis in forming the aftermath of terror and mass violence. 2023-04-13T07:59:07Z 2023-04-13T07:59:07Z 2023 chapter 9781032305257 9781032305264 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/62360 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003305569_10.4324_9781003305569-15.pdf Taylor & Francis The Legacies of Soviet Repression and Displacement Routledge 10.4324/9781003305569-15 10.4324/9781003305569-15 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb b8524528-8155-4150-b09e-f66e95705144 822a9356-0764-4730-8984-9958f379adad 9781032305257 9781032305264 Routledge 19 Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München Ludwig Maximilians University Munich open access
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The chapter reads Maria Stepanova’s 2017 Памяти памяти (In Memory of Memory, 2021) in view of the boom of testimonies of involvement in twentieth-century mass violence in Central and Eastern European literatures. Why this interest now? Hypothesis is that the texts address convergences between past complicities and current forms of participation in the wrongdoings of neoliberalism. These issues are related, since justifications of past involvement established the terminology, narratives, and heuristics in which mass violence has been subsequently discussed, thus forming the frame for the negotiation of current problematic involvement. Stepanova’s text stands out from the large corpus of contemporary family history narratives. First, it inverts the common order of critical discourse, as the literary text discusses theoretical concepts of memory studies, most notably Hirsch’s “postmemory.” Secondly, this discussion challenges a Western bias of memory studies, where political violence is portrayed as a traumatizing element of a past era handed down through transgenerational transmission. Stepanova outlines that in Eastern Europe, the experience of totalitarian terror and mass violence spread over several eras and multiple generations, creating a “traumatic enfilade” that comprises even the narrator’s present. In Memory of Memory addresses the critical participation of analysis in forming the aftermath of terror and mass violence.
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9781003305569_10.4324_9781003305569-15.pdf
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9781003305569_10.4324_9781003305569-15.pdf
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9781003305569_10.4324_9781003305569-15.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2023
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