That’s Gonna Leave a Mark: Positionality and Secondary Trauma in Researching Mass Killing and Genocide

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Todd H. Nelson
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Abstract

In this article, I describe two fieldwork experiences dealing with traumatic subject matter: a three-month trip to the Russian Federation, researching the crimes of Stalin against the Soviet population, and a two-week odyssey across Poland, researching memorialization of the Holocaust as it occurred there. I had a much more difficult time on the Polish trip. These trips took place at different times, and my positionality had changed dramatically between the two experiences. The other relevant factor in each case was the nature of the material itself and the extent to which I was exposed to it. The Stalinist Terror is much more submerged in Russian society, for example, and it was often challenging to find evidence that it had occurred, as this involved travel to often far-flung Gulag and mass execution sites. In the Polish case, however, the Holocaust narrative and evidence of its occurrence was front and center in my experiences there, to the extent that the ubiquity of sites where terrible events occurred became overwhelming. The interaction of my positionality and the extent to which I was exposed to different types of traumatic experience, led to widely differing emotional tolls on my psyche in each case. I hope an analysis of this interaction, and the differing effects it produced provides information about planning and executing research on traumatic subjects that is valuable to others preparing to undertake it. (Or perhaps it will provide a cautionary tale about what to avoid). This article adds to the literature on personal negative outcomes experienced by those researching traumatic subject matter, particularly in the social sciences.
这会留下痕迹:大规模屠杀和种族灭绝研究中的定位和二次创伤
在这篇文章中,我描述了两次涉及创伤性主题的田野工作经历:一次是为期三个月的俄罗斯联邦之行,研究斯大林对苏联人民犯下的罪行;另一次是为期两周的波兰之行,研究那里发生的大屠杀纪念活动。在波兰之行中,我遇到了更多困难。这两次旅行发生在不同的时间,我的立场在两次经历之间发生了巨大的变化。另一个相关因素是材料本身的性质以及我接触材料的程度。例如,斯大林时期的恐怖活动在俄罗斯社会中更为隐蔽,要找到它曾发生过的证据往往具有挑战性,因为这涉及到经常要前往遥远的古拉格集中营和大规模处决现场。然而,在波兰,大屠杀的叙事及其发生的证据在我的经历中占据了前沿和中心位置,以至于可怕事件发生地的无处不在变得令人难以抗拒。我的身份地位与我所接触到的不同类型的创伤经历之间的相互作用,导致了在每种情况下我的心灵所受到的情感伤害大相径庭。我希望通过对这种相互作用及其产生的不同影响的分析,能够提供有关规划和实施创伤主题研究的信息,这对其他准备开展研究的人来说很有价值。(或者,它还能提供一个警示故事,告诉我们应该避免什么)。这篇文章为研究创伤性主题(尤其是社会科学领域)的人员所经历的个人负面结果的文献增添了新的内容。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: The Journal of Contemporary Ethnography publishes in-depth investigations of diverse people interacting in their natural environments to produce and communicate meaning. At its best, ethnography captures the strange in the familiar and the familiar in the strange. JCE is committed to pushing the boundaries of ethnographic discovery by building upon its 30+ year tradition of top notch scholarship.
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