The Exodus Memory Community: Leveraging Oral History Records to Understand Collected Memories of Violence
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Date
2022-10-23
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Abstract
Memories about historical episodes of violence are a window not only into experiences of people’s past struggles but also about their aspirations for the future. In this paper, I focus on memories about the armed conflict in El Salvador (1980-1992) to better understand how sets of individual recollections reveal collected patterns in the narrative arcs of those who personally lived through the conflict. In so doing, I aim to expand prior works that have explored communities of memory in El Salvador. To accomplish this goal, I rely on an oral history archive. Using a grounded theory approach, I investigate how people in a rural community in northern El Salvador remember the armed conflict, how their collected memories compare to prior research about life stories of former members of the guerrilla movement and the armed forces, and finally, how oral histories contribute to a scholarly understanding of social memories of violence. I find that, within this archive, people’s recollections of the armed conflict can be organized around four themes: 1) community organizing, 2) repression, 3) exile, and 4) reconstruction. I suggest that the metaphor of the exodus serves to understand how individuals from this region remember the armed conflict. I argue that the exodus memory community reveals the importance of acts of everyday resistance to state repression, sheds light on how non-combatants remember the conflict, and suggests a larger trajectory to community organizing in which the war is an important chapter, but not the only one.
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The version at IU Works is the accepted version of the article. There were stylistic changes during the copy editing phase, prior to publication in the Memory Studies journal. However, the argument and the structure of the article are the same in both versions.
Per SAGE policy, "the Accepted Version of the article may be posted in the author's institutional repository and reuse is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses." https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/posting-to-an-institutional-repository-green-open-access
Keywords
Collected Memory, Community of Memory, Oral History, Armed Conflict, Insurgency
Citation
Martell, A. A. (2023). The exodus memory community: Leveraging oral history records to understand collected memories of violence. Memory Studies, 1–21.
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Article