ABSTRACT

Remembering Social Movements offers a comparative historical examination of the relations between social movements and collective memory.

A detailed historiographical and theoretical review of the field introduces the reader to five key concepts to help guide analysis: repertoires of contention, historical events, generations, collective identities, and emotions. The book examines how social movements act to shape public memory as well as how memory plays an important role within social movements through 15 historical case studies, spanning labour, feminist, peace, anti-nuclear, and urban movements, as well as specific examples of ‘memory activism’ from the 19th century to the 21st century. These include transnational and explicitly comparative case studies, in addition to cases rooted in German, Australian, Indian, and American history, ensuring that the reader gains a real insight into the remembrance of social activism across the globe and in different contexts. The book concludes with an epilogue from a prominent Memory Studies scholar.

Bringing together the previously disparate fields of Memory Studies and Social Movement Studies, this book systematically scrutinises the two-way relationship between memory and activism and uses case studies to ground students while offering analytical tools for the reader.

chapter 1|25 pages

Memory and social movements

An introduction

chapter 3|19 pages

The past in the present

Memory and Indian women’s politics

chapter 4|23 pages

History as strategy

Imagining universal feminism in the women’s movement

chapter 6|18 pages

Atomic testing in Australia

Memories, mobilizations and mistrust

chapter 7|20 pages

‘The FBI Stole My Fiddle’

Song and memory in US radical environmentalism, 1980–95

chapter 11|20 pages

Memory as political intervention

Labor movement life narration in Australia, Jack Holloway and May Brodney

chapter 12|21 pages

Remembering the movement for eight hours

Commemoration and mobilization in Australia

chapter 14|20 pages

Protest cycles and contentious moments in memory activism

Insights from postwar Germany

chapter 15|19 pages

‘Social movements, white and black

Memory struggles in the United States South since the Civil War’

chapter 16|6 pages

Afterword

The multiple entanglements of memory and activism