Schmukalla, Magda-Agata (2022) Memory as a Wound in Words. On transgenerational trauma, ethical memory and artistic speech. Feminist Theory: an international interdisciplinary journal, 25 (1). pp. 23-41. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/14647001221119993
Schmukalla, Magda-Agata (2022) Memory as a Wound in Words. On transgenerational trauma, ethical memory and artistic speech. Feminist Theory: an international interdisciplinary journal, 25 (1). pp. 23-41. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/14647001221119993
Schmukalla, Magda-Agata (2022) Memory as a Wound in Words. On transgenerational trauma, ethical memory and artistic speech. Feminist Theory: an international interdisciplinary journal, 25 (1). pp. 23-41. DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/14647001221119993
Abstract
In this article I ask how memory of historical trauma which spreads across generations and which resists the comfort of linear temporality, familiar ritual, and narrative, might feel, look and sound like. How might the memory of trans-generational trauma be shared and expressed? What could be ethical ways of engaging with the presence of such traumatic experiences? The article explores these questions by looking at how experiences of the womb make possible a sensual re-engagement with painful and unacknowledged historical experiences and so allow for a feminine response or sense of ‘response-ability’ to the presence of trans-generational trauma. It further shows how such a feminine response to trauma is enacted in an artistic speech which does not strengthen present identities but makes tangible their decomposition and like this manages to acknowledge the force and presence of trans-generational trauma. I develop this argument by reading diffractively through a web of conceptual and sensual entanglements which emerge from excerpts from Karen Barad’s quantum theory, Bracha Ettinger’s psychoanalytic theory, Joanna Rajkowska’s artwork Born in Berlin and my personal presence in the text. The article emphasizes the importance of affect as a non-discursive source for the memory of unclaimed traumatic experiences, but it also shows how an embodied recognition of such affects leads to ruptures in discourse and like this to alternative forms of trauma’s presence in speech and thought.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Art; Memory; Psychoanalysis; Quantum Theory; Transgenerational trauma; Womb |
SWORD Depositor: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Depositing User: | Unnamed user with email elements@essex.ac.uk |
Date Deposited: | 10 Nov 2022 16:43 |
Last Modified: | 30 Oct 2024 21:02 |
URI: | http://repository.essex.ac.uk/id/eprint/33529 |
Available files
Filename: 14647001221119993.pdf
Licence: Creative Commons: Attribution 3.0