Intense Paradoxes of Memory: Researching Moral Questions About Remembering the Socialist Past

Author: Gallinat, Anselma

Source: History and Anthropology, Volume 20, Number 2, June 2009 , pp. 183-199(17)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

In 2007 two researchers embarked upon a project on the “social construction of the socialist past in eastern Germany”. The project sought to explore how the socialist past is remembered today, and the moral ambiguities condensed in memories. This is particularly relevant in eastern Germany, where debates about how to interpret the socialist past continue to strive. However, it soon became apparent that doing such an ethnographic project is no easy task. Both researchers became sucked into the debates they sought to explore, including the question of who people had been during GDR (German Democratic Republic, former East Germany) times and whether this mattered. Using the ethnographic self as a resource, this article explores the ethics of complicity or detachment in fieldwork situations where the researcher was invited to make judgements. It argues that ethnographers need to address the question of value-judgements openly in their fieldwork, since they form an intrinsic part of all our humanity.

Keywords: Ethnography; Eastern Germany; Socialism; Memory; Morality

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02757200902885950

Publication date: 2009-06-01

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