ANNUAL ELIZABETH COLSON LECTURE* - Impossible situations: affective impasses and their afterlives in humanitarian and ethnographic fieldwork

Event date
11 June 2014
Event time
17:00
Oxford week
Venue
Oxford University Museum of Natural History
Speaker(s)
Professor Liisa Malkki

*The Annual Elizabeth Colson Lecture will take place in Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PW RSVP Heidi El-Megrisi | Tel: 01865 281728/9 | Email: rsc-outreach@qeh.ox.ac.uk | Register online: www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/colson2014

Registration: The lecture is free to attend and open to all but registration is required. To register via the online form, please visit: www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/colson2014

A nurse who worked for the Red Cross in the 1994 Rwanda genocide said, 'It's shocking. You know what's happening there, but you can't do anything. In other words, you hear the sounds of killing from behind the hill. And in the morning you go and see if anyone's alive. [...] You end up in these situations.'

 

The Red Cross medical and other aid workers Malkki interviewed in Finland often faced what one person called 'impossible situations' in their international humanitarian work. Such situations - affectively and ethically impossible, impasses from which there is no obviously good way forward - can also arise in anthropological research and cast long shadows.

Like anthropologists, aid workers are sometimes left feeling ambivalent, inadequate and even impure about the work that they have done, despite their best efforts to fulfil the standards of their profession and personal ethical commitments. These situations are a reminder that the conventional, widely popularised humanitarian position of moral high ground and mastery can actually be a fiction on many levels.

About the speaker 

Liisa H. Malkki is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Stanford University. Her research interests include: the politics of nationalism, internationalism, cosmopolitanism and human rights discourses as transnational cultural forms; the social production of historical memory and the uses of history; political violence, exile and displacement; the ethics and politics of humanitarian aid; child research; and visual culture.

Her field research in Tanzania explored the ways in which political violence and exile may produce transformations of historical consciousness and national identity among displaced people. This project resulted in Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory, and National Cosmology Among Hutu Refugees in Tanzania (University of Chicago Press, 1995). In another project, Malkki explored how Hutu exiles from Burundi and Rwanda, who found asylum in Montreal, Canada, imagined scenarios of the future for themselves and their countries in the aftermath of genocide in the Great Lakes Region of Africa.

Malkki's most recent book, Improvising Theory: Process and Temporality in Ethnographic Fieldwork (with Allaine Cerwonka) was published by the University of Chicago Press in 2007. Her forthcoming book, The Need to Help: The Domestic Arts of International Humanitarianism (Duke University Press), examines the changing interrelationships among humanitarian interventions, internationalism, professionalism, affect and neutrality in the work of the Finnish Red Cross in cooperation with the International Committee of the Red Cross.

 For all other enquiries, please contact:

Heidi El-Megrisi

Refugee Studies Centre
Oxford Department of International Development
University of Oxford
3 Mansfield Road
Oxford OX1 3TB, UK  
 Email: rsc-outreach@qeh.ox.ac.uk

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