Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning

Drawing on his book Warped Mourning,  and psychoanlytic studies of post-traumatic syndromes, the author analyses the processes by which a national culture comes to terms with its own violent past, as in the case of the French revolution, Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany. After the French revolution, rela...

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Main Author: Alexander Etkind
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Università degli Studi di Torino 2015-12-01
Series:CoSMO
Online Access:https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/COSMO/article/view/1087
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spelling doaj-ba062f09cc29456d9e3b5aefffb493c52021-09-13T19:50:26ZdeuUniversità degli Studi di TorinoCoSMO2281-66582015-12-01710.13135/2281-6658/1087Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and MourningAlexander Etkind0European University InstituteDrawing on his book Warped Mourning,  and psychoanlytic studies of post-traumatic syndromes, the author analyses the processes by which a national culture comes to terms with its own violent past, as in the case of the French revolution, Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany. After the French revolution, relatives of the guillotined victims came together in Victimes Balls, providing a prototypical case of what the author calls mimetic mourning. There are differences, however. While the Nazi Holocaust exterminated the Other, Soviet terror was suicidal: it was a rule rather than an exception that the perpetrators of one wave of terror became victims of the next. This made it all the more difficult to produce a collective memory elaborating mourning for its victims. As Freud mantains, repressed, unburied memory returns as the uncannyhttps://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/COSMO/article/view/1087
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander Etkind
spellingShingle Alexander Etkind
Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning
CoSMO
author_facet Alexander Etkind
author_sort Alexander Etkind
title Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning
title_short Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning
title_full Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning
title_fullStr Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning
title_full_unstemmed Victim Balls in Post-Stalin Russia: Distance, Generations, and Mourning
title_sort victim balls in post-stalin russia: distance, generations, and mourning
publisher Università degli Studi di Torino
series CoSMO
issn 2281-6658
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Drawing on his book Warped Mourning,  and psychoanlytic studies of post-traumatic syndromes, the author analyses the processes by which a national culture comes to terms with its own violent past, as in the case of the French revolution, Soviet Russia, Nazi Germany. After the French revolution, relatives of the guillotined victims came together in Victimes Balls, providing a prototypical case of what the author calls mimetic mourning. There are differences, however. While the Nazi Holocaust exterminated the Other, Soviet terror was suicidal: it was a rule rather than an exception that the perpetrators of one wave of terror became victims of the next. This made it all the more difficult to produce a collective memory elaborating mourning for its victims. As Freud mantains, repressed, unburied memory returns as the uncanny
url https://www.ojs.unito.it/index.php/COSMO/article/view/1087
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