ABSTRACT

In the past decade, Jeffrey Olick has established himself as one of the world’s pre-eminent sociologists of memory (and, related to this, both cultural sociology and social theory). His recent book on memory in postwar Germany, In the House of the Hangman (University of Chicago Press, 2005) has garnered a great deal of acclaim. This book collects his best essays on a range of memory related issues and adds a couple of new ones. It is more conceptually expansive than his other work and will serve as a great introduction to this important theorist. In the past quarter century, the issue of memory has not only become an increasingly important analytical category for historians, sociologists and cultural theorists, it has become pervasive in popular culture as well. Part of this is a function of the enhanced role of both narrative and representation – the building blocks of memory, so to speak – across the social sciences and humanities. Just as importantly, though, there has also been an increasing acceptance of the notion that the past is no longer the province of professional historians alone. Additionally, acknowledging the importance of social memory has not only provided agency to ordinary people when it comes to understanding the past, it has made conflicting interpretations of the meaning of the past more fraught, particularly in light of the terrible events of the twentieth century.

Olick looks at how catastrophic, terrible pasts – Nazi Germany, apartheid South Africa – are remembered, but he is particularly concerned with the role that memory plays in social structures. Memory can foster any number of things – social solidarity, nostalgia, civil war – but it always depends on both the nature of the past and the cultures doing the remembering. Prior to his studies of individual episodes, he fully develops his theory of memory and society, working through Bergson, Halbwachs, Elias, Bakhtin, and Bourdieu.

part 1|118 pages

Part I

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

From Collective Memory to the Politics of Regret

chapter 2|19 pages

Collective Memory

The Two Cultures 1

chapter 3|18 pages

Collective Memory and Cultural Constraint

Holocaust Myth and Rationality in German Politics 1

chapter 4|29 pages

Genre Memories and Memory Genres

A Dialogical Analysis of May 8, 1945, Commemorations in the Federal Republic of Germany 1

chapter 5|34 pages

Figurations of Memory

A Process-Relational Methodology, Illustrated on the German Case

part 2|74 pages

Part II

chapter 6|18 pages

The Politics of Regret

Analytical Frames 1

chapter 7|13 pages

The Value of Regret?

Lessons from and for Germany

chapter 8|21 pages

From Theodicy to Ressentiment

Trauma and the Ages of Compensation

chapter 9|18 pages

Collective Memory and Chronic Differentiation

Historicity and the Public Sphere