Yalou's Thesis draft

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Revision as of 14:46, 8 November 2023 by LouGreen (talk | contribs) (Created page with "= As archives are passed through generations, the beauty of trauma is traveling along them. = The thesis will cover the following topics: * The meaning of inheriting something: Written from my own perspective and experience inheriting the archive of my grandmother. * The meaning of generational repetition within my family archive: It will be connected to different archive materials, but also to behavior and with a look into a broader context. * The meaning of generatio...")
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As archives are passed through generations, the beauty of trauma is traveling along them.

The thesis will cover the following topics:

  • The meaning of inheriting something: Written from my own perspective and experience inheriting the archive of my grandmother.
  • The meaning of generational repetition within my family archive: It will be connected to different archive materials, but also to behavior and with a look into a broader context.
  • The meaning of generational trauma? And how it is alive within an archive.
  • How music can be used as spoken text: It connects to one of the archive materials, my grandmother's music book.

What am I writing:

The thesis will open with my family archive, and all the topics/chapters within the thesis will be connected to the archival material from my family archive. So the thesis will be an exploration of the archive. I inherited the archive from my grandmother Evà, the mother of my mother. And most of the archive material that is in the family archive is about my grandmother Evà. This is also a connection to my graduation project, as my graduation project is about my grandmother Evà and how her past influences the present.

It starts with the meaning of inheriting an archive and it will cover questions as: What does our possessions say about us? What does it say about our past, present and future? How do I identify with my family archive? What are some of the important findings within my family archive? This chapter/topic will end with my realization of all the resemblance with the present and the past.

And that will lead me to the topic of repetition and with a focus on generational repetition and it will cover questions as: What is the meaning of repetition within family generations? How does this connect to historical repetition? And how do I see repetition within my family and the archive?

This chapter/topic will be a realization of the previous chapter. It will be about generational trauma and how this is not only passed through emotionally but also alive in family archives. This chapter will cover the meaning of generational trauma and how this is seen in my family archive. I will end this chapter with my grandmother's story and her traumatic childhood. Within this ending I will use archive material to make the meaning and visualization more clear.

And one of the important archive materials in my family archive is the piano music of my grandmother. Within my graduation project (the documentary about my grandmother Evà) the piano music of my grandmother plays a very important voice, her voice. But also within the thesis I will use music as a second way to write the thesis. So in the end there will be the thesis and there will be music that fits to the thesis.

So the last topic/question will be how to translate music into words or how to translate words into music? As my grandmother wrote a lot of letters and music, it is the closest I can get to her voice.

For this question I will start with the importance of music within my family and with my grandmother as a starting point. I want to write about the connections between music and the written language. And in this part I will explain how I wrote the music piece for the thesis and how you can read it.

So these are the issues that I want to explore. The final thesis will consist of two texts: One will be a written story in music (musical notation), what the story is about is yet to be discovered (this will be creative writing and non-linear). Second will be a linear research text (a long read) with my family archive as the base of the text , written in a more intimate, diary form.

The key issues

  • My family archive (my family archive:  images, audio recording, video recording,  written pieces)
  • Repetition
  • Generational trauma
  • Music (how it works a a voice)

Construction in chapters

Introduction:

An image of the family tree

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A letter written by my grandmother, where she tells about her life. This letter already exists, but I might want to add some more details to it (stories that I have been told about by my mother and uncle).

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I will finish the introduction with the introduction of my grandmothers archive and the text will be build on the findings within my grandmothers archive

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Images of the archive


Chapter 1:

The meaning of inheriting an archive.

Chapter 2:

The topic of repetition and with a focus on generational repetition.

Chapter 3:

With generational trauma and how this is not only passed through emotionally but also alive in family archives

Chapter 4:

How to translate music into words or how to translate words into music?

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This chapter is connected to the music piece that I will write for my thesis. So in this chapter I will also provide an explanation about the meaning of the music piece and how I wrote it.


Conclusion

The conclusion will some up my findings in connection to my family archive.

For now I want to end the thesis with a question to myself…

How do we become part of the past?

It is already in us.