“Let me be dust”: Memory beyond testimony in Gwangju, South Korea

IF 1.4 2区 心理学 Q1 CULTURAL STUDIES Memory Studies Pub Date : 2023-05-26 DOI:10.1177/17506980231162329
Melissa Karp
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Abstract

Archives of the 5·18 Gwangju People’s Uprising—a 1980 pro-democracy protest in South Korea—entered UNESCO’s Memory of the World Register in 2011. UNESCO’s inclusion provided international recognition for the Uprising after censorship under the Chun Doo-hwan regime; however, the narrative clarity presented through photographs, documents, and testimony in the museum now defines and limits memorialization. By contrast, Ch’oe Yun’s 1988 novella There a Petal Silently Falls imagines what lies beyond archives. With its silent protagonist and fragmented, sometimes illegible prose, Petal interrogates the coherence of memory when stripped of testimony. Reading Petal and the Archives as distinct memory sites, this article questions how memory projects privilege evidentiary archives, which might perpetuate the very patterns of violence such projects seek to uncover. As human rights ideologies become increasingly predominant, Ch’oe’s novella reasserts not only that the agony of memory can exceed the intelligibility of the archive, but that it must.
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“让我化为尘土”:在韩国光州,超越证词的记忆
2011年,5.18光州人民起义(1980年发生在韩国的民主抗议活动)的档案被联合国教科文组织列入世界记忆名录。在全斗焕政权的审查之后,被列入联合国教科文组织,为起义提供了国际认可;然而,通过照片、文件和博物馆的证词呈现的叙事清晰度现在定义和限制了纪念馆。相比之下,蔡云1988年的中篇小说《那里有一片花瓣静静地飘落》想象的是档案之外的东西。通过沉默的主角和支离破碎、有时难以辨认的散文,《花瓣》在没有证据的情况下质疑记忆的连贯性。阅读花瓣和档案作为不同的记忆地点,这篇文章质疑记忆项目如何特权证据档案,这可能使这些项目试图揭示的暴力模式永久化。随着人权意识形态日益占据主导地位,choe的中篇小说不仅重申了记忆的痛苦可以超越档案的可理解性,而且必须如此。
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来源期刊
Memory Studies
Memory Studies Multiple-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
18.20%
发文量
75
期刊介绍: Memory Studies is an international peer reviewed journal. Memory Studies affords recognition, form, and direction to work in this nascent field, and provides a critical forum for dialogue and debate on the theoretical, empirical, and methodological issues central to a collaborative understanding of memory today. Memory Studies examines the social, cultural, cognitive, political and technological shifts affecting how, what and why individuals, groups and societies remember, and forget. The journal responds to and seeks to shape public and academic discourse on the nature, manipulation, and contestation of memory in the contemporary era.
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