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RCIN and OZwRCIN projects

Object

Title: Silences and Secrets of Family, Community and the State

Creator:

Pine, Frances ; Haukanes, Haldis

Date issued/created:

2021

Resource type:

Text

Subtitle:

Ethnologia Polona 42 (2021)

Publisher:

Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology Polish Academy of Sciences

Place of publishing:

Warsaw

Description:

24 cm

Type of object:

Journal/Article

Abstract:

In this article, we suggest that silence is often more about remembering than forgetting. We consider ways in which silences can occupy and dominate state discourse, community knowledge, family stories and individual narratives. Drawing on research material from Poland and the Czech Republic in the late socialist and post-socialist periods, we look at ways similar patterns of narrative fusion take place in various contexts in which both the public and the private domains are often shadowed by things veiled in secrecy and hidden from the general gaze. We argue that personal family and kin accounts of private things which for some reason cannot be spoken become entangled with, and to some extent communicated through, broader and more public historical narratives, and vice versa, and show how partial accounts are thus transmitted from generation to generation even while remaining largely unspoken. In developing our argument, we focus on the idea of walls of silence and on the process of drawingboundaries between people and the state, between generations (grandparents, parents and children) and between insiders and outsiders of communities. Suggesting that silence may be loud or quiet, we look at registers of silence and the ways in which they operate at the different levels of state, community and household. We ask what it means to hold certain kinds of knowledge, or to be excluded from these. At times, and for some people, knowledge may be a source of power or social or economic capital; for others, or in other contexts, being excluded from or rejecting knowledge, and thus not being privy to the subtexts of silence, may be a source or freedom and potential or possibility

References:

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Gross, Jan. 2003. Neighbours: the destruction of the Jewish Community in Jedwabne, Poland, 1941. London: Arrow Books
Haukanes, Haldis. 1999. Grand Dramas - Ordinary Lives. State, Locality and Person in Post-Communist Czech Society. Thesis for the degree of Dr. polit, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Bergen, Norway
Haukanes, Haldis. 2004a. Velké dramata, obyčejné životy. Postkomunistické zkušenosti na českém venkovĕ. (Grand Dramas - Ordinary Lives. Post-communist Experiences in the Czech Countryside). Prague: Sociologické nakladatelství SLON
Haukanes, Haldis. 2004b. “The Power of Genre. Local history-writing in Communist Czechoslovakia.” In Religion, Politics and Memory. The Past meets the Present in Contemporary Europe, edited by Frances Pine, Deema Kaneff and Haldis Haukanes, 93–108. Berlin: Lit Verlag
Haukanes, Haldis. 2013a. “Precarious Lives: Narratives of Hope, Loss and ‘Normality’ among Different Generations of Czechs”. Focaal. Journal of Global and Historical Anthropology 66: 47–57
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Haukanes, Haldis. 2017. “Futures Full of Promise, Futures of Despair. Contrasting Temporalities in the Life Narratives of Young Czechs.” Slovak Ethnology 65 (2): 120–133
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Relation:

Ethnologia Polona

Volume:

42

Start page:

99

End page:

112

Detailed Resource Type:

Article

Format:

application/octet-stream

Resource Identifier:

oai:rcin.org.pl:235455 ; 0137-4079 ; eISSN 2719-6976 ; doi:10.23858/ethp.2021.42.2702

Source:

IAiE PAN, call no. P 366 ; IAiE PAN, call no. P 367 ; IAiE PAN, call no. P 368 ; click here to follow the link

Language:

eng

Rights:

Creative Commons Attribution BY-NC-ND 4.0 license

Terms of use:

Copyright-protected material. [CC BY-NC-ND 4.0] May be used within the scope specified in Creative Commons Attribution BY-NC-ND 4.0 license, full text available at: ; -

Digitizing institution:

Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Original in:

Library of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Access:

Open

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