26 May 2023

In Conversation: Monumental Names: Archival Aesthetics and the Conjuration of History in Moscow, Galina Oustinova-Stjepanovic (Glasgow)

Online event, Round table

In conversation with

  • Yael Navaro (University of Cambridge)
  • Zahira Araguete-Toribio (Geneva Graduate Institute)

What stands behind the propensity to remember victims of mass atrocities by their personal names? Grounded in ethnographic and archival research with Last Address and Memorial, one of the oldest independent archives of Soviet political repressions in Moscow and a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, the book examines a version of archival activism that is centred on various practices of documentation and commemoration of many dead victims of historical violence in Russia to understand what kind of historicity is produced when a single name is added to an endless list. What do acts of accumulation of names of the dead affirm when they are concretised in monuments and performance events? The key premise is that multimodal inscriptions of names of the dead entail a political, aesthetic and conceptual movement between singularity and multitude that honours each dead name yet conveys the scale of a mass atrocity without reducing it to a number. Drawing on anthropology, history, philosophy, and aesthetic theory, the book yields a new perspective on the politics of archival and historical justice while it critically engages with the debates on relations and distinctions between names and numbers of the dead, monumental art and its political effects, law and history, image and text, the specific one and the infinite many.

Galina holds a PhD in Social Anthropology from University College London (UCL). She has taught social anthropology at UCL, University of Edinburgh and St.Andrews, and sociology at Oxford International in Dundee. She specialises in politics of history and memory, archival and human rights activism, anthropology religion, especially Islam and atheism; political anthropology; ethnic marginality. Galina has carried out ethnographic and archival research in Russia, North Macedonia, Greece and Serbia.

Online, 26 May, 2023