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https://evnuir.vnu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/30563| Title: | Transgenerational genocidal trauma of the Holodomor: Mental-health–relevant motifs in public testimonies |
| Authors: | Kokun, Oleg Zasiekina, Larysa |
| Affiliation: | G. S. Kostiuk Institute of Psychology of the National Academy of Educational Sciences of Ukraine, Ukraine Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University, Ukraine University of Exeter, UK |
| Bibliographic description (Ukraine): | Kokun, O., & Zasiekina, L. (2025). Transgenerational genocidal trauma of the Holodomor: Mental-health–relevant motifs in public testimonies. East European Journal of Psycholinguistics , 12(2), 223-242. https://doi.org/10.29038/kok |
| Journal/Collection: | East European Journal of Psycholinguistics |
| Issue Date: | Dec-2025 |
| Date of entry: | 2-Mar-2026 |
| Publisher: | Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University |
| Country (code): | UA |
| Place of the edition/event: | Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University |
| DOI: | https://doi.org/10.29038/kok |
| Keywords: | public memory oral story hypervigilance Ukraine the Holodomor intergenerational trauma food-security behabiours postmemory |
| Page range: | 223-242 |
| Abstract: | The Holodomor (1932–1933) persists in family narratives, household rules, and commemorations that may shape community health across generations. Using an open-source intelligence (OSINT) approach, we compiled and froze a unique-heavy corpus of public, non-academic testimonies in English and Ukrainian (N = 163) from the National Museum of the Holodomor-Genocide, the Ukrainian Canadian Research & Documentation Centre, and institutionally hosted YouTube interviews. We coded 10 motifs (presence or absence) and analyzed frequencies, pairwise co-occurrences, and descriptive transmission-motif associations (Fisher’s exact test/χ²). Identity and collective memory and explicit storytelling were most prevalent (n = 106 and n = 163), followed by food-security behaviours (n = 75), distrust/institutional mistrust (n = 64), and scarcity mindset/thrift (n = 48). Food-security behaviours co-occurred more with storytelling and identity/memory than with ritual/commemoration (food × story = 75; food × identity = 19; food × ritual = 0). Food-security also showed a directionally positive association with hypervigilance/anxiety (OR = 2.05; a = 13, b = 62, c = 8, d = 80; two-sided Fisher p = .16). Associations involving parenting/discipline and ritual/commemoration were small or unstable due to very low marker-present denominators (n = 4 and n = 2). The co-occurrence hub centered on storytelling, identity/memory, food-security, and hypervigilance, with distrust and scarcity as neighbours. Public testimony, handled ethically and systematically, can serve as a pragmatic indicator system to inform trauma-aware community practice and guide mixed-methods follow-ups. |
| URI: | https://evnuir.vnu.edu.ua/handle/123456789/30563 |
| Copyright owner: | © East European Journal of Psycholinguistics, 2025 |
| Content type: | Article |
| Appears in Collections: | East European Journal of Psycholinguistics, 2025, Volume 12, Number 2 |
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| eejpl_12_2_2025_Kokun_Zasiekina.pdf | 341,95 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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