Researching war and other traumatic historical events can raise many methodological, ethical and emotional issues for academics.
An event titled âWar, Gender, Memory: Feminist Scholars in Conversationâ, organised by the University of East London earlier this month, heard from four researchers about the dilemmas that they had faced and tried to overcome.
Nadje Al-Ali, professor of gender studies at Soas, University of London, described her work âdocumenting and narrating gendered memories of war and violence in the context of Iraq, and, more recently, Turkey and the Turkey-Kurdish conflictâ.
Taking time to build rapport with respondents was often essential, she said. On one occasion, she went to interview 12 Iraqi women in a restaurant and the first question she was asked was: âHow do we know youâre not a Baathist spy?â It took several meetings to gain their trust.
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In general, Professor Al-Ali said, âthe more we give in terms of time and intersubjective experience, the more we get backâ. When interviewing women about their memories, she initially âoften got the official scriptâ, and it was only later that âthey shared experiences that diverged from and sometimes challenged itâ. But, although she âtended to engage, question and challenge the women I talked toâ, this could sometimes lead to difficulties. When an Iraqi told her that only Shia had been tortured under Saddam Hussein, she had felt obliged to object â only for the woman to remove her shirt and show her scars as âevidenceâ. When a Turkish interviewee claimed that stories about human rights abuses against Kurds were untrue, she had again challenged her, but âthis didnât go down well and she didnât want to talk to me any moreâ.
Several speakers stressed the need for researchers to keep interrogating their own preconceptions as well as other peopleâs.
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Maja Korac-Sanderson, reader in refugee and migration studies at UEL, said that she had been âa feminist anti-war activistâ in Yugoslavia in the 1980s and saw her research as driven by âpersonal, academic and politicalâ issues. Her generation had achieved some notable victories, such as the recognition of rape as a war crime (although only when âsystematicâ and âa conscious tool of warâ). Yet they had largely failed to acknowledge âhow men are victimised by hegemonic conceptions of masculinityâ or to speak out about âthe gender-based sexual violence against menâ that was âsystematic across all the so-called detention centresâ in former Yugoslavia. Failure to do so represented âa missed opportunity for demanding more radical challenges of the patriarchal state systems of gender-power relations that discriminate against both women and many menâ.
AyĆe GĂŒl Altınay, professor of anthropology at Sabancı University in Istanbul, addressed the conference via Skype because she had been unable to obtain a visa to leave Turkey. She, too, urged delegates to reflect on their own blind spots.
She had attended university, she explained, at a time of ferocious fighting between the Turkish army and the Kurdish PKK forces, when âthe mountains of my childhood had turned into a war zone. I had no idea whether my primary school friends had become soldiers, village guards or guerrillas, or were still able to live in their houses and villages. In my political science and international relations classes, there was little mention of the ongoing war.â After studying in the US, therefore, she returned to Istanbul to âconduct a historical ethnography of militarism in Turkeyâ.
This research, Professor Altınay went on, was âconducted from 1997 to 2003 under difficult circumstances, with threats of police surveillance and legal investigationâ. The resulting book, The Myth of the Military-Nation: Militarism, Gender, and Education in Turkey, challenged much received wisdom about military service and conscientious objection. It was only in retrospect that Professor Altınay noticed a significant omission, namely that âthe genocide of Ottoman Armenians in 1915 was addressed only in a footnoteâ. Although she therefore began to investigate hidden Armenian history, it was not until 2015 that she took a further step and âstarted asking about the legacies of the genocide in my own familyâ and âarticulating my positionality as the great-granddaughter of a perpetratorâ. Facing up to their own âincoherencesâ and âacademic and non-academic complicityâ, she concluded, could only help researchers to understand the behaviour of others.
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Andrea Peto, professor of gender studies at the Central European University in Hungary, examined âthe memory politics of illiberal regimesâ. The end of communism in 1989 had led many in Hungary to challenge traditional âcommunist historiographyâ. What she called âthe second transitionâ, which started with the linked financial, security and migration crises around 2008, had led to attacks on her institution. It also produced âa state supporting a particular kind of remembranceâ, as could be seen clearly in the ways that the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 is now commemorated.
Although there is greater acknowledgement of the presence of women in the abortive revolt, the emphasis tended to be on âwomen in caring positionsâ or âwomen as members of the familyâ without any agency of their own. Ilona TĂłth, a leading figure who was executed at the age of 25, had been turned on billboards into an iconic âangel with nice make-upâ. Interviews often followed âstock narrativesâ, with women talking about getting involved in the rebellion âbecause of fathers or partners, and not about what it meant for themâ.
In one of her own projects, Professor Peto tried to interview women who had left the country after 1956. If their husbands happened to answer the phone, they would often say âI was also a migrant in 1956â or âMy wife is not at homeâ, so she had been forced to rely on âconspiratorial meetings in cafes or cultural centresâ to get the interviews that she wanted.
There were also issues about how research gets used. At the end of the 1990s, Professor Peto had looked into the largely taboo issue of women raped by Red Army soldiers at the end of the Second World War. Few others had been interested in pursuing her work at the time, but it was now âmuch cited by far-Right commentatorsâ.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Violence past, internal conflicts present
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