In this article, we study the diachronic (re)construction of repeated WWII-testimonies. Specifically, we scrutinize how shifting master narratives in the social context may affect how stories are told in a particular time and place. We selected testimonies by two Belgian concentration camp survivors – one Flemish and one Walloon – who both wrote down their story twice, namely in 1946 and 1985. By comparing the “same” diachronically dispersed stories – thus addressing the temporal dimension – and the differences in the narrators’ regional background – thus incorporating the spatial dimension – we study how overlapping and differing storytelling environments influenced the narratives’ construction. In the analyses, we adopt an interactional-s...
This article explores the strong correlations between mnemonic strategies and mnemonic triggers with...
Drawing on the experience of an ongoing ethnographic project on family stories of socialist Yugoslav...
The article presents researchers revisiting a group of interviewees – Holocaust survivors – who were...
In this article, I inquire into the life of a single Holocaust survivor in order to give a “thick de...
This project scrutinizes the relation between the way narrators construct their stories and identiti...
The analysis of narratives, as a preferred method to index a speaker’s personal stance and social id...
This article involves a study of the narrative of a Second World War Resistance member by means of a...
For this study, twelve life stories of alumni from the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, who were enr...
International audienceThe process of remembering is one of re-presentation. But for the survivor of ...
We are all storytellers. We tell stories in a variety of settings, to a variety of audiences, and fo...
One of the main objections against oral history interviews is their retrospective character – the di...
This book aims to appraise sociolinguistic work devoted to the form and function of storytelling and...
Within this study I investigate the importance of traumatic war memories in the contemporary social ...
National identities are social phenomena with concrete—both political and social—effects...
Storytelling is at the heart of how we remember, with others as much as in solicitude, via internal ...
This article explores the strong correlations between mnemonic strategies and mnemonic triggers with...
Drawing on the experience of an ongoing ethnographic project on family stories of socialist Yugoslav...
The article presents researchers revisiting a group of interviewees – Holocaust survivors – who were...
In this article, I inquire into the life of a single Holocaust survivor in order to give a “thick de...
This project scrutinizes the relation between the way narrators construct their stories and identiti...
The analysis of narratives, as a preferred method to index a speaker’s personal stance and social id...
This article involves a study of the narrative of a Second World War Resistance member by means of a...
For this study, twelve life stories of alumni from the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, who were enr...
International audienceThe process of remembering is one of re-presentation. But for the survivor of ...
We are all storytellers. We tell stories in a variety of settings, to a variety of audiences, and fo...
One of the main objections against oral history interviews is their retrospective character – the di...
This book aims to appraise sociolinguistic work devoted to the form and function of storytelling and...
Within this study I investigate the importance of traumatic war memories in the contemporary social ...
National identities are social phenomena with concrete—both political and social—effects...
Storytelling is at the heart of how we remember, with others as much as in solicitude, via internal ...
This article explores the strong correlations between mnemonic strategies and mnemonic triggers with...
Drawing on the experience of an ongoing ethnographic project on family stories of socialist Yugoslav...
The article presents researchers revisiting a group of interviewees – Holocaust survivors – who were...