C 2025

Autoethnographic Explorations of (Post-)Socialist Childhood Memories Through Storytelling : Migrating as and With Children

KAŠPAROVÁ, Irena and Susanne RESS

Basic information

Original name

Autoethnographic Explorations of (Post-)Socialist Childhood Memories Through Storytelling : Migrating as and With Children

Name in Czech

Autoetnografické prozkoumávání (post)socialistických vzpomínek na dětství skrze vyprávění příběhů: migrace jako a s dětmi

Authors

KAŠPAROVÁ, Irena and Susanne RESS

Edition

1. vyd. London, Novelty, Innovation and Transformation in Educational Ethnographic Research : European Perspectives, p. 180-192, 13 pp. 2025

Publisher

Routledge

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Chapter(s) of a specialized book

Country of publisher

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Publication form

electronic version available online

References:

Marked to be transferred to RIV

No

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

ISBN

978-1-032-61735-0

EID Scopus

Keywords (in Czech)

vdělání; paměť; dětství; socialismus; koláž; etnografie

Keywords in English

education; memory; childhood; socialism; collage; etnography
Changed: 17/12/2025 00:50, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

Anzaldúa’s poetic description of the shadowy spaces of borderlands, in this chapter, we reflect on the conduciveness of seemingly nonscientific, artistic methods such as collage making and creative writing, when coping with disruptive life experiences. We share our personal stories and reflect on the collectively shared practice that unearth the stories. Both stories emerged from collective, autoethnographic and storytelling with childhood memories of migration as and with children in late and postsocialism. The first story is shared through a collage that shows fragments of the author’s socialist childhood as they resurface throughout her adult life. The second story has been analysed and abstracted from diary entries written in the author’s youth weaving together memories of alienation, fragmentation and belonging. The artistic and evocative engagement afforded an avenue into making sense of otherwise fragmented memories. They allowed the coconstruction of meaning beyond individual stories. The stories illustrate our experiences of negotiating belongings within the self and within the collectively shared experience of migrating and/or political dislocation at the end of the 20th century in Europe. We hope that the stories resonate with others’ experiences and inspire transnational solidarities and belonging.

In Czech

Dva příběhy - vzpomínky na socialistické dětství, zpracované formou autoetnografie.

Files attached