Abstract

ABSTRACT This paper, based on 15 months of fieldwork and archival research carried out in 2018/2019 for my PhD in Social Anthropology, takes as its object the everyday coexistence with the Second World War military dead scattered across the rural landscape of Brandenburg, formerly part of the German Democratic Republic (1949–1990). Focusing on the practices through which the living relate to the war dead ‘out of place’, I argue that the construction of the war dead as valued members of the social collectivity does not necessarily depend upon their ritual ‘separation’. Indeed, the physical proximity of the misplaced and unrelated war dead in my fieldsite results in their adoption and conceptualization as local dead. I contextualize attachments to the fallen in the local history of chaotic ‘total war’, which collapsed the boundary between the military and civilian experience of war, and transformed the spaces of everyday life into battlefields.

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