Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory
Remembering is a complex and notoriously fallible process. This is partly because memory is not an exclusively individual act. Not only what we remember, but the way we remember is influenced by social circumstances and co-constructed worldviews, as well as by our personal needs and perspectives. In...
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doaj-6d483cf245484659ab2880c5b3807bbf2020-11-24T22:15:11ZdeuFQS Forum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272009-03-011021213Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted MemoryJan K. Coetzee0Asta Rau1University of the Free StateUniversity of the Free StateRemembering is a complex and notoriously fallible process. This is partly because memory is not an exclusively individual act. Not only what we remember, but the way we remember is influenced by social circumstances and co-constructed worldviews, as well as by our personal needs and perspectives. In the context of the research interview, the researcher-participant relationship also mediates how experience is re-membered and narrated. All these factors need to be taken into account when, as social researchers, we attempt to unpack the meanings and motives that underlie what research participants say. This paper aims to show how interviewees who have endured traumatic experiences for prolonged periods of time remember, reflect on and articulate their suffering. To illustrate how personal memories of lived, real experiences intertwine with socially and contextually embedded values and relationships we draw on the narratives of former political prisoners in South Africa and in erstwhile Czechoslovakia. We also present narratives of South African street children, and women living with HIV/AIDS. When interpreting the in-depth data that show how participants remember their experience of suffering, we find that the very nature of memory poses a hermeneutical challenge. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0902144http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1282memorymeaningtrauma narrativesintersubjectivitypolitical prisonersHIV/AIDSstreet children |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jan K. Coetzee Asta Rau |
spellingShingle |
Jan K. Coetzee Asta Rau Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory Forum: Qualitative Social Research memory meaning trauma narratives intersubjectivity political prisoners HIV/AIDS street children |
author_facet |
Jan K. Coetzee Asta Rau |
author_sort |
Jan K. Coetzee |
title |
Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory |
title_short |
Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory |
title_full |
Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory |
title_fullStr |
Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory |
title_full_unstemmed |
Narrating Trauma and Suffering: Towards Understanding Intersubjectively Constituted Memory |
title_sort |
narrating trauma and suffering: towards understanding intersubjectively constituted memory |
publisher |
FQS |
series |
Forum: Qualitative Social Research |
issn |
1438-5627 |
publishDate |
2009-03-01 |
description |
Remembering is a complex and notoriously fallible process. This is partly because memory is not an exclusively individual act. Not only what we remember, but the way we remember is influenced by social circumstances and co-constructed worldviews, as well as by our personal needs and perspectives. In the context of the research interview, the researcher-participant relationship also mediates how experience is re-membered and narrated. All these factors need to be taken into account when, as social researchers, we attempt to unpack the meanings and motives that underlie what research participants say. This paper aims to show how interviewees who have endured traumatic experiences for prolonged periods of time remember, reflect on and articulate their suffering. To illustrate how personal memories of lived, real experiences intertwine with socially and contextually embedded values and relationships we draw on the narratives of former political prisoners in South Africa and in erstwhile Czechoslovakia. We also present narratives of South African street children, and women living with HIV/AIDS. When interpreting the in-depth data that show how participants remember their experience of suffering, we find that the very nature of memory poses a hermeneutical challenge. URN: urn:nbn:de:0114-fqs0902144 |
topic |
memory meaning trauma narratives intersubjectivity political prisoners HIV/AIDS street children |
url |
http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/1282 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jankcoetzee narratingtraumaandsufferingtowardsunderstandingintersubjectivelyconstitutedmemory AT astarau narratingtraumaandsufferingtowardsunderstandingintersubjectivelyconstitutedmemory |
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