The "Untold" Stories of Outsiders and Their Significance for the Analysis of (Post-) Conflict Figurations. Interviews with Victims of Collective Violence in Northern Uganda (West Nile)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17169/fqs-15.3.2138Keywords:
narrative interviews, biographical research, Uganda, West Nile, violence, peacebuilding, conflict transformation, reconciliation, collective memoryAbstract
We have conducted interviews with women and men who are victims of collective violence in the region of West Nile in northern Uganda, by the hands either of rebels or of members of various government armies. We show the position and relevancy of their perspectives in public discourses in and about this region. Using biographical-narrative interviews and group discussions, we highlight how their voices are subdued in public discourse in which the ex-rebels present themselves as the victims of history. The interviews illustrate that the narrative interview method is of help also in this non-European research setting as it supports the interviewees to verbalize what they have suffered. The analysis of how collective violence is thematized in the interviews as well as in public discourses brings about important insights into the perspectivity and the biases of these discourses—and how they were generated. For this reason (amongst others), it is important, when analyzing the region's recent history as well as (post-) conflict figurations in general to accommodate the biographical experiences of victims of collective violence.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2014 Artur Bogner, Gabriele Rosenthal
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.