Folk art, storytelling, and space: Collective memory and pesticide exposure

Alison E. Adams, A. Saville, Thomas E. Shriver
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Abstract

Extant research regarding collective memory has established the importance of examining how socially constructed memories shape group identities, lived experiences, and realities over time. In addition, collective memory scholars have underscored the inextricable and co-shaping linkages between space, place, and collective memory. However, comparatively less is known about how collective memories are constructed and articulated in cases of environmental exposures. We argue that it is important to investigate the ways in which exposed communities preserve their stories and how their collective memories influence efforts to seek redress as well as push for broader social change. We examine a case of historical pesticide exposure and related illnesses and mortality among farmworkers in Central Florida. We ask how exposed communities translate their experiences into a cohesive collective memory, how cultural artifacts preserve their stories in the broader discursive context, and how they utilize various histories as a form of health activism. We draw on data including ten years of farmworker blog entries, in-depth interviews, and media coverage. Our analysis revealed how farmworkers created artifacts representative of their memories of environmental exposures and illnesses, as well as how they translated these experiences into a cohesive collective memory.
民间艺术、讲故事和空间:集体记忆与农药接触
有关集体记忆的现有研究已经确立了研究社会建构的记忆如何随着时间的推移塑造群体身份、生活经历和现实的重要性。此外,集体记忆学者还强调了空间、地点和集体记忆之间不可分割和共同塑造的联系。然而,人们对环境暴露情况下集体记忆是如何构建和表述的了解相对较少。我们认为,重要的是要调查受暴露社区保存其故事的方式,以及他们的集体记忆如何影响寻求补救和推动更广泛社会变革的努力。我们研究了佛罗里达州中部农民工历史上的杀虫剂接触及相关疾病和死亡案例。我们询问暴露于农药的社区如何将他们的经历转化为具有凝聚力的集体记忆,文化艺术品如何在更广泛的话语背景下保存他们的故事,以及他们如何利用各种历史作为一种健康行动主义形式。我们利用的数据包括十年来农民工的博客文章、深度访谈和媒体报道。我们的分析揭示了农民工如何创造出代表他们对环境暴露和疾病记忆的人工制品,以及他们如何将这些经历转化为具有凝聚力的集体记忆。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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