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Publication

Silence

Ana Dragojlovic and Annemarie Samuels published an article on Silence in the Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Although silence is common in everyday social interactions, anthropological research, has focused primarily on what people say and do. However, in recent decades, there has been a greater focus on how the unsaid, the unspeakable, and the invisible shape social, political, and subjective worlds. Anthropologists, in particular, have proposed that silence is more than just the inverse of speech.

Author
Ana Dragojlovic and Annemarie Samuels
Date
27 February 2023
Links
Read the article in the Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

Abstract

Silence is a common occurrence in everyday social interactions, yet anthropological research, like most research in the social sciences and humanities, has mostly focused on what people say and do. Over the last couple of decades, however, there has been an increased attention to how the unsaid, the unspeakable, and the invisible shape social, political, and subjective worlds. In particular, anthropologists have theorised silence as more than just the opposite of speech. They have started to think of silence as a complex moral, affective, and social force.

Anthropological rethinking of silence and voice has been particularly prominent in feminist traditions, in the study of care, and in decolonial scholarship that often studies silence as refusal and resistance. Attending to histories of silence and silencing has a potential to provide insights into different forms of structural oppression under which individual and collective strategies of survival might be falsely interpreted as mere compliance. Silence has also been important in research on ritual activity, where it is a prerequisite for communicating with ancestors, spirits, ghosts, and other apparitions. Here, silence can co-create a sense of hauntings as a response to repressed past and present forms of violence and harm. By attending closely to the unspoken and unspeakable aspects of language and art, anthropologists increasingly find new ways to include silences in their research and modes of representation. In these and other ways, the study of silence can greatly enrich our understanding of the social world.

Read the article in in the Open Encyclopedia of Anthropology

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