DAILY LIFE OF MILITARY HOSPITAL TRAINS: RESEARCH POTENTIAL OF THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF FRONTLINE EXTREMITY
- Authors: Churakova O.V.1
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Affiliations:
- Northern (Arctic) Federal University named after M. V. Lomonosov
- Issue: Vol 45, No 1 (2023)
- Pages: 83-92
- Section: CONFERENCE «PETROZAVODSK: A CITY OF MILITARY GLORY»
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/2542-1077/article/view/294044
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.15393/uchz.art.2023.856
- ID: 294044
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Abstract
The article deals with the understudied aspects of frontline everyday life: the casual life of militaryhospital trains during the wars of the first half of the twentieth century. During the functioning of the railway militaryevacuation service, its structure and management system was changing, the capacity for transporting wounded soldiersincreased and the infrastructure improved. Meanwhile, most of the problems of the daily life of the military hospitaltrains remained the same. The purpose of this work is to reveal the research potential of the anthropology of extremesituations of war using materials related to the daily life of military hospital trains in Russia in the first half of thetwentieth century. A wide range of methodological approaches, from social history to emotionology, can be used for theanalysis of “small life-worlds”, an example of which was the intentionally constructed space of an ambulance train.Strategies for survival in the marginal circumstances of a mobile rescue vehicle and the extreme nature of being betweenthe theater of operations and the rear – between life and death – can be explored in line with historical and anthropologicalapproaches. In addition to archival materials, personal documents were used as the research sources. The corpus of theego-documents of mid-level medical workers (sisters of mercy) is the most complete, with the ego-documents ofsanitary workers and doctors less available and the narrative sources created by the railway employees practicallyabsent. The interpretation of visual sources (photographs and newsreels) and the representations of the of an ambulancetrain image in artistic culture can also be challenging. The study resulted in identifying gaps for further research andfinding resources for applying new research trends. Historical psychology allows us to consider the formation ofadaptation practices in the field conditions of the war time and reveal the compensatory functions of cultural events inthe limited space of an ambulance train. Imagology and gender studies can be effectively used to analyze interethnic and gender communication practices. Interdisciplinary research proves to be the most effective means for dealing with this topic and opens the possibility for the preparation of monographs.
About the authors
O. V. Churakova
Northern (Arctic) Federal University named after M. V. Lomonosov
Email: ochurakova@yandex.ru
Cand. Sc. (History)
References
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