3 research outputs found
Forgetfulness without memory: Reconstruction, Landscape and the Politics of Everyday in Post-Earthquake Gujarat, India
For many good reasons, after natural disasters it is common to work with âmemoryâ as part of a collective catharsis and a globalized humanitarian logic. Longâterm anthropological research on the aftermath of the 2001 earthquake in Gujarat, however, also demonstrates the significance of forgetting in local practice. Immediately after the disaster, people vowed to abandon the sites of their loss, leave the ruins as monuments, and rebuild anew on safer ground. In time, though, life returned to the ruins as the terrible proximity of death receded, as memories and new salience were shaped by acts of reconstruction. The article explores some of the political and social factors that make this form of forgetting possible â or even necessary. Evidence of earlier earthquakes in the same region indicates that such âforgettingâ has an established history. Together, ethnographic and archival materials combine to cast doubt over the emphasis on ârememberingâ as the only âmemory solutionâ to suffering