
Johana Wyss at the Laboratory of Anthropology of Contemporary Worlds
Johana Wyss at the Laboratory of Anthropology of Contemporary Worlds
Wed Mar 12 13:48:03 CET 2025

Mnemonic Exclusion and the Politics of Memory: A Case Study of the Velvet Revolution
We are pleased to announce that our colleague, Johana Wyss, will give a talk at the upcoming Laboratory of Anthropology of Contemporary Worlds. Her presentation, titled Mnemonic Exclusion and the Politics of Memory: A Case Study of the Velvet Revolution, will explore the politics of historical memory and symbolic exclusion in contemporary Czech and Slovak society.
Event Details:
- Date: Wednesday, March 13, 2025
- Time: 12:00 PM – 2:00 PM (CET)
- Location: Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB) – Campus Solbosch
- Building: Building S
- Room: Henri Janne (S.S.15.331)
- Address: Rue Jeanne, 44, 1050 Brussels, Belgium
Abstract
In my talk, I will explore the concept of mnemonic exclusion, focusing on how the Velvet Revolution is remembered 35 years after it took place. Drawing on two rounds of ethnographic fieldwork conducted in November 2019 and November 2024, I will examine the ways in which large sections of the population are symbolically excluded from the public narrative surrounding the revolution.
Through an analysis of commemoration events, semi-structured interviews, and public discourse, I will highlight the politics of exclusion, focusing on groups that remain absent in the collective memory of the Czech/Slovak transition. I argue that this mnemonic exclusion extends beyond mere forgetting, fostering a deeper form of social marginalization and political polarization.
In the context of contemporary Czech political polarization, my research sheds light on the intersection of historical memory, populism, and identity, offering a critical perspective on memory politics in modern Europe. This case study is part of a broader ethnographic project titled Memory and Populism from Below, which examines the influence of collective remembrance on populist movements and identity politics across various European borderlands, including Bukovina, Burgenland, Silesia, Istria, and Galicia (Poland/Ukraine).
Poster in PDF here.