Memory and kinship across the Indo–Myanmar border: A study of the lived experiences of displaced Kuki families

IF 1.4 2区 心理学 Q1 CULTURAL STUDIES
S. Haokip
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The crisis of India’s north-east is intertwined with the contestation of its history and memory. Its colonial spatial strategy and administrative policies – inherent in a series of ethnographic works – continue to have repercussions in the post-independence era. Therefore, memory as a border device is an important means of understanding the experiences and manoeuvres of the borderland communities. This article seeks to understand the challenges of violence and displacement faced by the Kuki community, which lives along the Indo–Myanmar border, in a conflict that has separated many families living in the north-eastern region. Following the independence of India, the dispute over territories in this region took a violent turn, leading to forced displacement and aggravating the problems of the borderland community. Based on a qualitative study among different generations of displaced Kuki families, this article argues that the intergenerational transmission of memories can be creatively used to generate responsibility and adjustment to the challenges of poverty and separation caused by the international border. It was also found that embodied memories of violence and displacement are transmitted across generations and that these memories can be creatively fashioned in the families’ everyday lives. Despite the challenges of mobility, elders continue to sustain a familial relationship across the border as the narratives they transmit to younger generations are often saturated with affective meaning, which foregrounds a mode of habitation and understanding of spatial imagination that is different from the present-day, hardened border.
印缅边境的记忆与亲属关系:对流离失所的库基族家庭生活经历的研究
印度东北部的危机与对其历史和记忆的争论交织在一起。其殖民空间战略和行政政策-固有的一系列民族志作品-继续在独立后的时代产生影响。因此,记忆作为一种边界装置,是理解边境社区经验和行动的重要手段。本文试图了解生活在印缅边境的库基社区所面临的暴力和流离失所的挑战,这场冲突使生活在东北部地区的许多家庭分离。在印度独立之后,该地区的领土争端发生了暴力转变,导致被迫流离失所,并加剧了边境社区的问题。本文基于对库基族流离失所家庭不同世代的定性研究,认为记忆的代际传递可以创造性地用于产生责任感和适应国际边界造成的贫困和分离的挑战。研究还发现,暴力和流离失所的具体记忆是代代相传的,这些记忆可以在家庭的日常生活中创造性地形成。尽管面临着流动性的挑战,但老年人继续维持着跨越边界的家庭关系,因为他们传递给年轻一代的叙事往往充满了情感意义,这突显了一种不同于当今僵化的边界的居住模式和对空间想象的理解。
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
Memory Studies
Memory Studies Multiple-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
18.20%
发文量
75
期刊介绍: Memory Studies is an international peer reviewed journal. Memory Studies affords recognition, form, and direction to work in this nascent field, and provides a critical forum for dialogue and debate on the theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues central to a collaborative understanding of memory today. Memory Studies examines the social, cultural, cognitive, political and technological shifts affecting how, what and why individuals, groups and societies remember, and forget. The journal responds to and seeks to shape public and academic discourse on the nature, manipulation, and contestation of memory in the contemporary era.
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