Precarious Commons: Archiving Soviet Terror in Contemporary Russia

IF 1.1 2区 文学 Q3 COMMUNICATION
Ekaterina V. Haskins
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT Using the example of Memorial, Russia’s oldest nongovernmental organization, this essay develops the concept of “precarious commons” to describe the continuous and uncertain process of creating an open-access digital resource and maintaining a community around it. In 2022, Memorial became one of the recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize for its decades-long efforts to open official archives, to collect and solicit testimony from survivors and families of victims of Soviet terror, and to promote democratic values and human rights in public life. These activities illustrate precarious cultural commoning: ever threatened by bureaucratic enclosure, political and cultural amnesia, and outright persecution. The organization’s extragovernmental, mostly volunteer-driven work has established an open digital archive of state repressions as well as a vital space for educating a new generation of memory activists and imagining a different collective future.
岌岌可危的公地:当代俄罗斯的苏联恐怖档案
本文以俄罗斯历史最悠久的非政府组织Memorial为例,提出了“不稳定公地”(precarious commons)的概念,以描述创建开放获取数字资源并围绕其维护社区的持续和不确定过程。2022年,纪念馆成为诺贝尔和平奖的获得者之一,因为它几十年来一直努力开放官方档案,收集和征求苏联恐怖事件幸存者和受害者家属的证词,并在公共生活中促进民主价值观和人权。这些活动说明了不稳定的文化共性:一直受到官僚主义包围、政治和文化失忆以及公然迫害的威胁。该组织主要由志愿者推动的政府外工作,建立了一个公开的国家镇压数字档案,也为教育新一代记忆活动人士和想象不同的集体未来提供了重要空间。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
14.30%
发文量
40
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