Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation

The article takes its point of departure from the concreteness of unexploded ordnance left over from World War II, which in the 2020s runs parallel to an increasing militarisation of the public sphere and a rise in arms production. Old and new weaponry globally endangers lives and environments long...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bendix Regina F.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2025-06-01
Series:Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/jef-2025-0002
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849703343829549056
author Bendix Regina F.
author_facet Bendix Regina F.
author_sort Bendix Regina F.
collection DOAJ
description The article takes its point of departure from the concreteness of unexploded ordnance left over from World War II, which in the 2020s runs parallel to an increasing militarisation of the public sphere and a rise in arms production. Old and new weaponry globally endangers lives and environments long after peace accords. This is perhaps not a welcome but a necessary opportunity for cultural researchers to problematise the blind spots in cultural practice and communication surrounding the continued presence of old wars in daily life, and in doing so encourage renewed efforts for peace and disarmament. Working with ethnographic and historical data from Germany, some avenues for such research are suggested first with a case study of a medium-sized city where finds of dangerous war waste still occur frequently. In documenting how new cultural practices are devised to manage difficult and costly bomb diffusions, the effort to normalise what better not be downplayed comes to the fore. Further, a look at language and imagery surrounding the experts carrying out the bomb diffusions points to the foregrounding of hero narratives. The efforts of countless volunteers receeds into the background, as does the necessary evacuation of citizens to create a space within which the work takes place and the real and complex craft skill needed for the task unfolds. Finally, the focus turns to the unpredictable agency of eighty-year-old bombs for which the categorisation ‘heritage out of control’ is recommended – an inheritance whose existence humanity should eradicate and forestall.
format Article
id doaj-art-19c2f66bb813445fb7b6df18a64082ee
institution DOAJ
issn 2228-0987
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Sciendo
record_format Article
series Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics
spelling doaj-art-19c2f66bb813445fb7b6df18a64082ee2025-08-20T03:17:19ZengSciendoJournal of Ethnology and Folkloristics2228-09872025-06-0119112810.2478/jef-2025-0002Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of MilitarisationBendix Regina F.01Institute for Cultural Anthropology/European Ethnology Georg-August-University, Göttingen, Heinrich-Düker-Weg 14, D-37073Göttingen, GermanyThe article takes its point of departure from the concreteness of unexploded ordnance left over from World War II, which in the 2020s runs parallel to an increasing militarisation of the public sphere and a rise in arms production. Old and new weaponry globally endangers lives and environments long after peace accords. This is perhaps not a welcome but a necessary opportunity for cultural researchers to problematise the blind spots in cultural practice and communication surrounding the continued presence of old wars in daily life, and in doing so encourage renewed efforts for peace and disarmament. Working with ethnographic and historical data from Germany, some avenues for such research are suggested first with a case study of a medium-sized city where finds of dangerous war waste still occur frequently. In documenting how new cultural practices are devised to manage difficult and costly bomb diffusions, the effort to normalise what better not be downplayed comes to the fore. Further, a look at language and imagery surrounding the experts carrying out the bomb diffusions points to the foregrounding of hero narratives. The efforts of countless volunteers receeds into the background, as does the necessary evacuation of citizens to create a space within which the work takes place and the real and complex craft skill needed for the task unfolds. Finally, the focus turns to the unpredictable agency of eighty-year-old bombs for which the categorisation ‘heritage out of control’ is recommended – an inheritance whose existence humanity should eradicate and forestall.https://doi.org/10.2478/jef-2025-0002waste of warunexploded ordnancemilitarisationcrafts of undoing weaponryinheritanceheritage out of controlnormalisation of dangerheroisationartistic intervention
spellingShingle Bendix Regina F.
Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation
Journal of Ethnology and Folkloristics
waste of war
unexploded ordnance
militarisation
crafts of undoing weaponry
inheritance
heritage out of control
normalisation of danger
heroisation
artistic intervention
title Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation
title_full Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation
title_fullStr Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation
title_full_unstemmed Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation
title_short Inheritances Past and Future: Addressing the Everyday Legacy of War in Times of Militarisation
title_sort inheritances past and future addressing the everyday legacy of war in times of militarisation
topic waste of war
unexploded ordnance
militarisation
crafts of undoing weaponry
inheritance
heritage out of control
normalisation of danger
heroisation
artistic intervention
url https://doi.org/10.2478/jef-2025-0002
work_keys_str_mv AT bendixreginaf inheritancespastandfutureaddressingtheeverydaylegacyofwarintimesofmilitarisation