Dr Ashwiny O. Kistnareddy

Leverhulme Early Career Fellow, University of Oxford

�Nothing ever dies�: memory and marginal children�s voices in Rwandan and Vietnamese narratives


Journal article


Ashwiny O. Kistnareddy
2021

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Kistnareddy, A. O. (2021). �Nothing ever dies�: memory and marginal children�s voices in Rwandan and Vietnamese narratives.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Kistnareddy, Ashwiny O. “�Nothing Ever Dies�: Memory and Marginal Children�s Voices in Rwandan and Vietnamese Narratives” (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Kistnareddy, Ashwiny O. �Nothing Ever Dies�: Memory and Marginal Children�s Voices in Rwandan and Vietnamese Narratives. 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{ashwiny2021a,
  title = {�Nothing ever dies�: memory and marginal children�s voices in Rwandan and Vietnamese narratives},
  year = {2021},
  author = {Kistnareddy, Ashwiny O.}
}

Abstract

Memory is a highly contested notion insofar as it is claimed by the collective (Halbwachs, Young) and deployed within a variety of political and socio-cultural contexts. For Viet Thanh Nguyen, the �true war story� can be told by those who lived through it, thereby wresting power from �men and soldiers� and dominant structures (Nothing Ever Dies, Harvard UP, 2017: 243). Examining the dialectics of remembering and forgetting, this article examines narratives which reclaim memory as a personal and as a collective plea to understand the structural discrepancy at play from the child, who is victim of war. It examines the memoir of a Tutsi refugee child, Moi, le dernier Tutsi (C. Habonimana, Plon R�cit, 2019) and an autobiographical narrative by a Vietnamese refugee in Canada, Ru (K. Th�y, Liana L�vi, 2010), to gauge the extent to which such narratives create their own memorial spaces and in so doing reclaim their marginal memories and centre them, while grappling with the imperative to forget. Ultimately it tests Nguyen�s theory that memory can be just and that in this ethical recoding of memory, the humanity and inhumanity of both sides is underlined.


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