The Weight of History

Authors

  • Julia L. Offen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14712/12128112.2402

Keywords:

creative ethnography, narrative, Europe, nationality, war, circus, history

Abstract

This is a short work of creative ethnographic prose that relies solely upon crafted narrative to show rather than explain its message. In the mid 1990s, I spent two years doing ethnographic fieldwork with European traveling circuses. One troupe I worked in for a considerable amount of time included members of 16 different nationalities. They had a posted rule banning the display of national flags or symbols within their circus community, and – other than some fleeting heated moments during World Cup soccer – seemed to keep conflicts by nationality group to a minimum. Nonetheless, historical tensions rested barely under the surface. Although none of the people portrayed here were alive for the events of WWII, that conflict still echoed down into everyday life in the circus over 50 years later. This story is based upon actual characters and events the author experienced, although all individuals’ names and some identifying characteristics have been changed.

Author Biography

Julia L. Offen

a practicing anthropologist and writer living in California, USA. She combines her interests in ethnography (PhD, Anthropology) and creative writing (MFA, English) in her work, and publishes her creative prose in both anthropological and literary journals. She is the ethnographic fiction and creative nonfiction editor of the journal Anthropology and Humanism, and works as Senior Analyst at Topos Partnership.

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Published

2022-07-01

How to Cite

Offen, J. L. (2022). The Weight of History. Lidé města, 24(2), 263-267. https://doi.org/10.14712/12128112.2402

Issue

Section

Creative Ethnographies