1st Edition

Dwellers of Memory Youth and Violence in Medellin, Colombia

By Pilar Riano-Alcala Copyright 2006
    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    252 Pages
    by Routledge

    Dwellers of Memory is an ethnographic study of how urban youth in Colombia came to be at the intersection of multiple forms of political, drug-related, and territorial violence in a country undergoing forty years of internal armed conflict. It examines the ways in which youth in the city of Medellin reconfigure their lives and, cultural worlds in the face of widespread violence. This violence has transgressed familiar boundaries and destroyed basic social supports and networks of trust. This volume attempts to map and understand its patterns and flows.

    The author explores how Medellin's youth locate themselves and make, sense of violence through contradictory and shifting memory practices. The violence has not completely taken over their cultural worlds or their subjectivities. Practices of remembering and forgetting are key methods by which these youth rework their identities and make sense of the impact of violence on their lives. While the experience of violence is rooted in urban space and urban youth, the memory dwellers use a sense of place, oral histories of death, and narratives of fear as survival strategies for inhabiting violent neighborhoods. The book also examines fissures in memory, the contradictory constructions of young people's subjective selves, and practices of gendered violence and terror. All have and continue to pose risks to the historical memory and cultural survival of the residents of Medellin.

    Dwellers of Memory offers an alternative ethnographic approach to the study of memory and violence, one that calls into question whether the, role of the ethnographer of violence is to be a mere witness of terror, or to oppose it by writing against it. It will be of interest to sociologists, anthropologists, and students of, ethnography.

    List of Maps and Images Prologue Preface Acknowledgments Introduction Colombia at the Crossroads Youth's Forgettings and the Politics of Memory Bridges of Memory The Circulation of Memories and the Traffic of Violence An Anthropology of Remembering and Forgetting Dwellers of Memory: The Youth in this BookChapter 1 Local Histories in a National Light Clouds of Smoke: The Thirties A War of Colors and Horrors: The Fifties Red Lights in the Barrio: The Tolerant Years Languages of Concealment: The Sixties Travels and Travellers: The Seventies A Troubling Image of Youth: The 1980s and 1990s Busy Streets Local Wars Pigs for Peace Por que, a pesar de tanta mierda, este barrio es poder?Chapter 2 Remembering Place: Making and Sensing Places Place-Making: Memory Landscapes and Landmarks A Walkabout The Memory of Things Seen Soundscaping Dwelling Place-Naming Changing Names, Changing Dynamics Typologies of Social Space and Spatial Practices Home Far Away From Home Imagining and Border Crossing Communities of Memory in PlaceChapter 3 The Living Memories of Death: Oral Histories of Death and the Dead I see his blood that falls like seed: Narratives of the Dead How do you speak to the disappeared? Chronologies of Death and Dead-Listings Events and Their Meaning: Giving Death a Place An Embodied Place for Death Subjects of Death: MartyrsChapter 4 Ghosts, Possessed Bodies and Warriors: Narratives of Fear and Gendered Violence Ghostly Stories and Social Regulations This happened to me, I have lived this: Witnesses and Possessed Spirits Warrior Bodies, Women and Terror Fissures in the Social Fabric and Social TensionsChapter 5 A Generational Forgetting? Territorial Otherness Paths of Distrust and Vengeance Witnessing, Suffering and Memory Epilogue Bibliography Index

    Biography

    Pilar Riano-Alcala