‘The pawns that they moved here and there’? Microacts, room for manoeuvre, and everyday agency in the 1974 Cyprus conflict

Huw Halstead*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Oral testimonies from Greek Cypriots who lived through the Greek dictatorship’s 1974 coup d’état on Cyprus and the subsequent Turkish invasion frequently present the narrators as mere pawns in a macro-scale historical drama, having little to no control over or understanding of the broader events unfolding around them. On one level, this rings true, as individual soldiers and civilians were rarely if ever able to dictate or perceive the broader trajectories of the conflict in which they found themselves. Yet this perspective belies the subtler reality that even in chaotic conditions and under deeply restricted circumstances people exercise agency and create spaces, however small, in which to operate as autonomous agents and to shape their own personal trajectories. Whilst they could not leave the chessboard, these ‘pawns’ actively moved themselves here and there, performing microacts that locally refracted official diktats and ideologies in mutable ways. Moreover, in the construction of their testimonies they assert further agency, assembling these microacts into meaningful narratives by placing them within broader historical frameworks.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)245-267
JournalEuropean History Quarterly
Volume52
Issue number2
Early online date30 Mar 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2022

Keywords

  • Alltagsgeschichte
  • Cyprus 1974
  • Everyday life
  • Memory
  • Oral history
  • War

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