Interrupted biographies: six distinguished female figures between repressions and survival during the communist regime in Bulgaria

  • Author: Nurie Muratova
  • Institution: South-West University “Neofit Rilski”, Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria
  • ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1083-4722
  • Author: Kristina Popova
  • Institution: Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Studies with Ethnographic Museum, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences
  • ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2825-7938
  • Year of publication: 2023
  • Source: Show
  • Pages: 50-63
  • DOI Address: https://doi.org/10.15804/hso230403
  • PDF: hso/39/hso3903.pdf
  • License: This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the CreativeCommons Attribution license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.

The paper presents the interruptions to the biographical trajectories of six women persecuted in different periods during the communist regime in Bulgaria in order to outline the common features as well the specificity of their cases: two former leading feminists: Julia Malinova ( Julia Jakovlevna Schneider – President of the Bulgarian Women’s Union until 1926, Dimitrana Ivanova, President 1926–1944), two members of the Oppositional (Nikola Petkov’s) Bulgarian Agrarian Party (Rayna Lapardova and Tsvetana Tsacheva), two scientists from the Turkish minority in Bulgaria Mefkure Mollova and Hayriye Memova). The paper presents the documentation on these women and their political and academic activities, and the deficits of information, as well as the radical interruptions to their lifestyles, careers, family life, and social ties, and social integration of these women. The research is based on documents from personal finds, the women’s publications, documents from the secret archives of the State Security, memories, and personal testimonies.

REFERENCES:

  • Aberdeen J., Aberdeen I., More Cracks with ‘We Twa’ Reminiscences of Lord and Lady Aberdeen, London 1929, p. 164
  • Angelova M., Bulgarian Women Scientists “Removed” from the Collective Memory in the Communist Times – the Case of Kostadinka Tvardishka (1907–1963), Balkan Studies forum 2022, 1, pp. 173–201
  • Daskalova K., Julia Malinova, [in:] Biographical Dictionary of Women’s Movements and Feminisms: Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe, 19th and 20th Centuries, eds F. De Haan, K. Daskalova, A. Loutfi, Central European University Press, 2006, pp. 293–294
  • Daskalova K., Dimitrana Ivanova, [in:] Biographical Dictionary of Women’s Movements and Feminisms: Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe, 19th and 20th Centuries, eds F. De Haan, K. Daskalova, A. Loutfi, Central European University Press, pp. 182–184
  • Dobre C.F., Women Remembering Communism in Romania: Former Political Detainees Perspectives, [in:] Women and minorities archives, 3, eds K. Popova, N. Muratova, Subjects of Archiving, Blagoevgrad 2011, pp. 42–58
  • Koleva D., Remembering Socialism, Living Postsocialism: Gender, Generation and Ethnicity, [in:] Peripheral Memories: Public and Private Forms of Experiencing and Narrating the Past, eds E. Boesen, F. Lentz, M. Margue, D. Scuto, R. Wagener, [Histoire 36], transcript Verlag, 2012, pp. 219–237
  • Luleva A., Women Campers. On the collective memory of a generation, [in:]Gender and Transition, eds K. Daskalova, T. Kmetova, Sofia 2011, pp. 142–152
  • Muratova N., Women Beyond Her Archive, Blagoevgrad 2021
  • Nazarska G., (Self) imposed Silences: “Rewriting” of Biographies of Bulgarian Women Intellectuals after 1944, Balkan Studies forum 2015, 2, pp. 176–184
  • Nazarska G., Women Honorary Citizens in the Social Space of Sofia (First Half of the 20th Century), [in:] Cities in the Balkans. Spaces, Faces, Memories, ed. R. Preshlenova, Bulgarian Academy of Science, 2021, pp. 305–322
  • Pashova A., Tolerance of difference, Blagoevgrad 2002
  • Tancheva G., Petko Frangov, Biyalacherkva 2013
  • Vodenicharov P., Behind the facade of the state feminism. The silenced women in the newspaper “Workers’ mission” 1976, Balkan Studies Forum 2015, 2, pp. 185–192
  • Zafer Z., Women and resistance to forced assimilation in Bulgaria, International Journal of Social Sciences 2/2 Fall, 2018, pp. 1–11
  • Zafer Z., The Fight of Women from Northeast Bulgaria Against Compulsory Assimilation, [in:] International 30th Anniversary of the Forced Migration from Bulgaria to Turkey, İzmir Kâtip Çelebi Üniversitesi Yayınları, İzmir 2020, pp. 51–63

społeczność turecka w Bułgarii kobiety z Partii Agrarnej kobiety w nauce bułgarski feminizm Hayriye Memova Mefkure Mollova Tsvetana Tsacheva Rayna Lapardova Dimitrana Ivanova Julia Malinova Turkish community in Bulgaria Agrarian Party women political repressions women in science Bulgarian Feminism represje polityczne reżim totalitarny totalitarian regime

Message to:

 

 

© 2017 Adam Marszałek Publishing House. All rights reserved.

Projekt i wykonanie Pollyart