Mass graves gone missing: Producing knowledge in a world of absence

Douglas, Lee. 2014. Mass graves gone missing: Producing knowledge in a world of absence. Culture & History Digital Journal, 3(2), e022. ISSN 2253-797X [Article]

[img]
Preview
Text
chdj_2014_e022.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial.

Download (326kB) | Preview

Abstract or Description

On May 1st, 2014 members of the historical memory team from the Aranzadi Sciences Society arrived in Oropesa de Toledo. The objective: to locate two mass graves containing the remains of Republicans killed in the weeks after Franco’s troops entered the town in 1936. Despite evidence regarding the mass graves’ existence, they were never found. Drawing on empirical, ethnographic data collected in the town of Oropesa in the months following this “unsuccessful” exhumation, this paper narrates the curious story of two graves that have “gone missing.” It considers the intellectual labor exerted to produce historical knowledge in a context where municipal archives remain inaccessible and family histories are marked by silence and dis-information. The author suggests that the absence of information –the dearth of historical, narrative evidence– regarding the lives of the defeated makes the production of historical and forensic knowledge a complicated affair. It tracks how kin-based knowledge and scarce archival documents are gathered and animated in order to make exhumations possible. Considering the forms of knowledge that are needed in order to engage techno-scientific expertise in meaningful ways, the paper attends to the important role that kin-based knowledge and seemingly “unimportant” documents play in processes of historical enunciation.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.3989/chdj.2014.022

Keywords:

Techno-scientific expertise, kin-based knowledge, archival records, forensic science, social memory, Spanish Civil War, Francoism

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Anthropology
Anthropology > Centre for Visual Anthropology (CVA)

Dates:

DateEvent
31 October 2014Accepted
30 December 2014Published

Item ID:

37995

Date Deposited:

16 Dec 2024 16:35

Last Modified:

16 Dec 2024 16:35

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/37995

View statistics for this item...

Edit Record Edit Record (login required)