ABSTRACT

Public debates over the last two decades about social memories, about how as societies we remember, make sense of, and even imagine and invent, our collective pasts suggest that grand narratives have been abandoned for numerous little stories that contest the unified visions of the past. But, while focusing on the diversity of social remembering, these fragmentary accounts have also revealed the fault-lines within the theoretical terrain of memory studies. This critical anthology seeks to bridge these rifts and breaks within the contemporary theoretical landscape by addressing the pressing issues of social differentiation and forgetting as also the relatively unexplored futuristic aspect of social memories. Arranged in four thematic sections which focus on the concepts, temporalities, functions and contexts of social memories, this book includes essays that range across disciplines and present a variety of theoretical approaches, from phenomenological sociology and systems theory to biography research and post-colonialism.

chapter |13 pages

Theorizing social memories

An introduction

part I|54 pages

Concepts

chapter 1|16 pages

Lifeworld and trauma

Selectivity of social memories

chapter 3|12 pages

The forms of the past

Temporalities, types, and memories *

part II|39 pages

Temporalities

chapter 4|14 pages

Bringing the future back in

Temporal registers and the media

chapter 6|9 pages

The heterogeneous time of the postcolonial

Inverted memories of Hitler in India

part III|50 pages

Functions

chapter 8|16 pages

The construction of coherence

Reconsidering the political functions of memory

chapter 9|19 pages

Exploring the dark side of social memory

Towards a social theory of forgetting

part IV|51 pages

Contexts

chapter 10|13 pages

The forms of Web-memory

chapter 11|13 pages

What is the context of memory? *

chapter 12|24 pages

Memories engendered in diaspora

Multivocal narratives of Tamil refugee women