Ping-Chun Hsi­ung on »Hea­ring Silence«

The Inter­na­tio­nal Psy­cho­ana­ly­tic Uni­ver­sity Ber­lin (IPU) is hono­u­red to wel­come renow­ned rese­ar­cher Ping-Chun Hsi­ung for a lec­ture on »hea­ring silence«. The event is held in coope­ra­tion with the Kilian Köh­ler Cen­ter at Bochum Uni­ver­sity, the Cen­ter for Trans­di­sci­pli­nary Gen­der Stu­dies at Hum­boldt Uni­ver­sity Ber­lin, and the Cor­ne­lia Goe­the Cen­ter for Women’s Stu­dies and Gen­der Stu­dies at Goe­the Uni­ver­sity Frank­furt.

When? 12 Novem­ber 2025, 7.00 pm

Where? IPU Ber­lin, House 91b, Lec­ture Hall 4 (Alt-Moa­bit 91b, 2. floor), 10557 Ber­lin

We also wel­come your par­ti­ci­pa­tion via Zoom. You will receive the Zoom link after regis­tering at: https://​www​.ipu​-ber​lin​.de/​h​e​a​r​i​n​g​-​s​i​l​e​n​c​e​-​t​e​a​c​h​i​n​g​-​a​n​d​-​s​t​u​d​y​i​n​g​-​t​h​e​-​p​o​l​i​t​i​c​s​-​o​f​-​q​u​a​l​i​t​a​t​i​v​e​-​i​n​t​e​r​v​i​e​w​i​ng/

Abs­tract: When con­duc­ting qua­li­ta­tive inter­views, rese­ar­chers are ready to hear infor­mants‹ nar­ra­ti­ves that align with com­mon assump­ti­ons, idio­syn­cra­tic con­cepts, or their own theo­re­ti­cal frame­works. Accounts fal­ling out­side these pre-exis­ting boun­da­ries become inau­di­ble and over­loo­ked. This pre­sen­ta­tion posits that spo­ken and uns­po­ken silen­ces are hid­den tre­asu­res. »I will illus­trate the stra­te­gies I’ve deve­lo­ped to help stu­dents reco­gnize the mecha­nisms of silen­cing and hear these silen­ced accounts«, says Ping-Chung Hsi­ung. »I will also use the empi­ri­cal case of China’s Great Leap For­ward and Great Famine (1958–1962) to show the silen­ces that arise from the chal­lenges of acces­sing archi­val data and enga­ging with sur­vi­vors of trau­ma­tic his­to­ri­cal events. I will demons­trate how, despite these obs­ta­cles, it is pos­si­ble to unco­ver a locally groun­ded lexi­con of dis­con­tent through a secon­dary ana­ly­sis of sur­vi­vor inter­views.« Ulti­m­ately, this talk argues that the ability to hear silence is not only indis­pensable in aca­de­mic pur­suits but also essen­tial in ever­y­day life.

Ping-Chun Hsi­ung is a rese­ar­cher whose eth­no­gra­phic fieldwork, inter­views, and archi­val stu­dies have advan­ced gen­der stu­dies and qua­li­ta­tive rese­arch both locally and inter­na­tio­nally. Her work chal­lenges domi­nant social sci­ence para­digms by unco­ve­ring and cri­ti­cally exami­ning rese­arch tra­di­ti­ons out­side Wes­tern norms. Her early rese­arch on gen­der, the state, and Taiwan’s eco­no­mic deve­lo­p­ment is regarded as a clas­sic in the field. In the 1990s, she joi­ned other dia­spora femi­nist scho­lars in col­la­bo­ra­ting with acti­vists and aca­de­mics in China to estab­lish femi­nist NGOs and women/​gender stu­dies cur­ri­cula at uni­ver­si­ties in China — a pio­nee­ring effort that hel­ped sus­tain femi­nist acti­vism and nur­ture new gene­ra­ti­ons of femi­nist scho­lars.