A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda

Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work === Gerad D. Middendorf === For over two decades the people of northern Uganda endured horrific atrocities during Africa’s forgotten war in the form of attacks and child abductions by the Lord’s Resistance Army, animal r...

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Main Author: Westfall, David W.
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/38176
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-381762017-11-14T15:45:42Z A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda Westfall, David W. Uganda Lord's Resistance Army Doctor of Philosophy Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work Gerad D. Middendorf For over two decades the people of northern Uganda endured horrific atrocities during Africa’s forgotten war in the form of attacks and child abductions by the Lord’s Resistance Army, animal rustling by neighboring ethnic groups, and internal displacement of an unimaginable 90 percent of the northern parts of the country. With the majority of internally displaced persons spending over a decade in IDP camps, an entire generation of Acholi was socialized and acculturated in a non-traditional environment. A decade after the last LRA attack, I ask, what are the cultural impacts of the conflict and how has the culture recovered from the trauma. Using ethnographic analysis, this dissertation is rooted in over 150 interviews. While it has been presented to the world at large that Joseph Kony’s LRA is the one of the biggest problems facing the region, I found it is not the case. Interviewees discussed serious inadequacies in education, land conflict, culture loss, climate change, drought, famine, a perceived generational divide, and a strong distrust of the Ugandan government. Additionally this research examines the case of Uganda through the lens of, and attempts to build upon, Jeffrey Alexander’s cultural trauma process. I argue the increasing reach and instantaneous nature of social media can interact with, alter, and prolong the trauma process. The externalization of defining a problem and solutions for that problem while the trauma process is occurring, or shortly after the trauma has subsided, can lead to retraumatization. 2017-11-08T17:06:21Z 2017-11-08T17:06:21Z 2017 December Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2097/38176 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Uganda
Lord's Resistance Army
spellingShingle Uganda
Lord's Resistance Army
Westfall, David W.
A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda
description Doctor of Philosophy === Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work === Gerad D. Middendorf === For over two decades the people of northern Uganda endured horrific atrocities during Africa’s forgotten war in the form of attacks and child abductions by the Lord’s Resistance Army, animal rustling by neighboring ethnic groups, and internal displacement of an unimaginable 90 percent of the northern parts of the country. With the majority of internally displaced persons spending over a decade in IDP camps, an entire generation of Acholi was socialized and acculturated in a non-traditional environment. A decade after the last LRA attack, I ask, what are the cultural impacts of the conflict and how has the culture recovered from the trauma. Using ethnographic analysis, this dissertation is rooted in over 150 interviews. While it has been presented to the world at large that Joseph Kony’s LRA is the one of the biggest problems facing the region, I found it is not the case. Interviewees discussed serious inadequacies in education, land conflict, culture loss, climate change, drought, famine, a perceived generational divide, and a strong distrust of the Ugandan government. Additionally this research examines the case of Uganda through the lens of, and attempts to build upon, Jeffrey Alexander’s cultural trauma process. I argue the increasing reach and instantaneous nature of social media can interact with, alter, and prolong the trauma process. The externalization of defining a problem and solutions for that problem while the trauma process is occurring, or shortly after the trauma has subsided, can lead to retraumatization.
author Westfall, David W.
author_facet Westfall, David W.
author_sort Westfall, David W.
title A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda
title_short A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda
title_full A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda
title_fullStr A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda
title_full_unstemmed A lost generation? Kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern Uganda
title_sort lost generation? kony, conflict, and the cultural impacts in northern uganda
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/38176
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