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Call for Papers

Theme: Silence after Violence
Subtitle: Mass Atrocities and Their Aftermaths
Type: International Workshop
Institution: Institute for Reconciliation and Social Justice,
University of the Free State
   Holocaust Studies Center, University of Vermont
Location: Bloemfontein (South Africa)
Date: 22.–23.5.2014
Deadline: 1.11.2013

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Since the 1960s survivors and participants of violence, both mass
and individual, as well as bystanding witnesses have been urged "to
talk about it". Increasingly any reluctance to recall and
give-witness (note the religious phrasing) about all that had
happened is framed as pathological, as a symptom of trauma. It is
taken as an indice both of the harm already done as well as having
continuing harmful effects in its own right. Silence or arguing for
the right and the role of forgetting  has been effectively
delegitimized, and in some cases strongly advised against.

Emerging by the 1990s as the near hegemonic paradigm, indeed
advocated as the only way available to all people from all cultures
and in all contexts, this confessional-model underpinned the
construction of elaborate institutional frameworks and organizations
(Truth and Reconciliation committees; archives of testimonies;
testimonies-based museums and commemoration sites; witness-giving
survivors as tour guides and so forth). These in turn continue to
reproduce and further entrench the confessional model.

Indeed it is clear that this development is part of a broader
globalizing discourse which prioritizes psycho-analytic concepts
based on the US experience. Sometimes these psycho-analytic and human
rights concepts have merged with one another because they presume
human subjects who are intelligible and may become “objects of care”
without reference to social context.

This model is institutionalized by now in the Center of Transitional
Justice, and in particular in the version of the South African TUC
has been ‘exported’, i.a. to Sierra Leone and Liberia. At the same
time, the concept of Truth (and Reconciliation) Commissions has seen
a large measure of evolution which also can be read as a
transnational learning experience.

To be sure, talking about potentially traumatic past experiences
is often a positive, indeed healing event, both in terms of the
individual's psychological wellness as well in terms of the political
culture of the communities involved. Silencing: the imposition of
taboos; marginalization and de-legitimization of certain experiences
and narratives, are often harmful on the individual level and
poisonous and unsustainable on the collective level. However this is
not always the case.

More so, the truth as such and in its entirety (assuming this is at
all intelligible) is never really welcomed, but only some parts of it
that are to be framed in particular terms and not in others. Indeed,
social theorists ranging as far back as Renan or Simmel to
contemporary scholars like Taussig have stressed the necessity of
silence, secrets and the uncanny in creating social order.

To paraphrase the folklorist Wendy Doniger:
(Truth-telling or Confession) is like a mercenary, it can be made to
fight anyone. Every telling puts a different spin on it, implicitly
inviting the teller, the listener or the commentator to moralise.
Although the word is often used nowadays to designate an idea…..,
(confession) most certainly is not an idea. It is a narrative that
makes possible any number of ideas, but that does not commit itself
to any single one. Its ability to contain in latent form several
different attitudes to the events it depicts allows each different
telling to draw out the attitude it finds sympathetic (2004;19).

This Workshop/Symposium will examine the role of Silence, Secrets
and the Unsaid in the aftermath of mass atrocities. It seeks to
enrich the confessional mode by problematizing these issues by
placing them within a wider political economy framework.

Much can be gained from a constructive critical assessment of the
confessional model and its opposite, why silence is maintained. What
were the particular reasons and actors involved in its emergence? Can
one challenge the dichotomy silence - confession by describing and
analyzing a continuum or a multiplicity of discursive strategies that
has been taking place in the aftermath of mass violence in different
places and historical contexts during the 20th century such as: the
Armenian genocide, the Nazi genocidal campaigns Yugoslavia after the
Second World War, the USSR during and after the Stalinist era,
Indonesia, Cambodia after 1979, Argentina Chile and Uruguay after the
dictatorships, Mozambique Namibia and Angola, Rwanda the Democratic
Republic of Congo and South Africa?

Enquiries and Paper proposals not exceeding 400 words with a short CV
should be sent to: silenceafterviole...@gmail.com 

Deadline for submissions: 01.11.2013

Organizing Committee:
- Yohanatan Alsheh, Wilfrid Laurier University and University of the
  Free State
- Rob Gordon, University of the Free State & University of Vermont
- Andre Keet, Institute for Reconciliation and Social Justice,
  University of the Free State
- Christian Williams, University of the Western Cape


Contact:

Rob Gordon
University of the Free State and University of Vermont
Email: rgor...@uvm.edu




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