Rodologia: Genealogy as Therapy in Post-Soviet Russia

被引:14
作者
Leykin, Inna
机构
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
genealogy therapy; memory; power; postsocialism; MEMORY; EXPERIENCE; POLITICS; CONCEPTIONS; PSYCHOLOGY; CULTURE; SELF;
D O I
10.1111/etho.12078
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
The article examines how people in post-Soviet Russia learn to interpret Soviet political genealogies as implicated in their own family histories. Based on long-term fieldwork in a large provincial city in Russia, it focuses on a particular form of amateur genealogy called Rodologia (rodstvo = kinship). Informed by a burgeoning self-help culture, Rodologia's followers argue that psychological self-realization can be achieved by identifying the effects of state violence on family histories. Using a Lamarckian-like idea of heredity, Rodologia argues that social and political upheavals, such as gulags, collectivization, and wars, scar people's genes and shape the behavior, self, and history of their descendants. The article demonstrates how popular attempts to attribute meanings to Soviet state violence are mediated by a surprising alliance of two cultural logics for articulating the self emerging in post-Soviet Russiaa thriving therapeutic self-help culture and a form of recollection inspired by genealogical imagination. A flourishing therapeutic culture and amateur genealogy, I show, emerge as a means to both organize one's relation to the Soviet past and to make sense of fundamental changes occurring in meanings of political order in post-Soviet Russia.
引用
收藏
页码:135 / 164
页数:30
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