Bulgaria
Joāo Felipe Gonçalves
Prof. Joāo Felipe Gonçalves has a PhD in Anthropology from the University of Chicago, his work focuses on Latin America and the Caribbean – especially in Cuba and its diaspora, Caribbean social thought, and memorialization of slavery. He has training and a strong interest also in studies in Eastern Europe and Africa. His research themes are mainly: urban space, anthropology of history, political symbolism, nationalism, social life of monuments, real socialism and post-socialism, migrations and diasporas.
This project analyzes the ubiquitous narratives and experiences about ghosts and treasures in contemporary Paraguay as folk memories of past violence and war. Such haunting spirits and buried riches are said to be results of the War of the Triple Alliance (1864-1870), which killed at least half of Paraguay’s prewar population and during which its wealthy citizens buried their valuables to prevent looting by foreign invaders. Today, Paraguay is full of stories of encounters with distressed wartime ghosts and of people digging the land in search of underground treasures. Also, all Paraguayans are familiar with widespread tales of specters who scare the greedy away from those riches and who reveal their location to selected people deemed worthy of receiving them. Based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in 2022 and 2024-2025, this project interprets narratives and experiences about ghosts and treasures in Paraguay as vernacular memories that allow people to a) feel the past in the present through the senses of hearing, sight, and touch, and b) make moral sense of trauma and violence in ways that depart from official nationalistic, militaristic commemorations. Such sensory and moral histories offer messages of loss and recovery, of trauma and hope, to today’s war-torn world.
ghosts and treasures; war; folk memory; trauma and violence; ethnographic fieldwork; sensory and moral histories