ABSTRACT

In recent years memory has attracted increasing attention. From analyses of electronic communication and the Internet to discussions of heritage culture, to debates about victimhood and sexual abuse, memory is currently generating much cultural interest. This interdisciplinary collection takes a journey through memory in order to contextualize this current "memory boom."

Memory Cultures focuses on memories "outside"--in the many fields within which understandings of memory have been produced. It focuses less on memory as an object whose inner workings are to be studied, and more on memory as a concept. It traces the genealogies of our contemporary Western understandings of memory through studies of the early modern arts of memory. It also discusses nineteenth-century evolutionary museums, and the modernist explorations of artists and writers. Here it explores the differences between Western and non-Western concepts of the lived past and compares understandings of memory in history, psychoanalysis, and anthropology.

The volume is divided into five parts: "Believing the Body"; "Propping the Subject"; "What Memory Forgets: Models of the Mind"; "What History Forgets: Memory and Time"; and "Memory Beyond the Modern." Individual essays by many of the foremost international scholars in memory studies trace memory's intimate association with identity and recognition, with cities, with lived time, with the science of the mind, with fantasy and with the media.

Memory Cultures will be of essential interest to those working in the fields of cultural studies, history and also anthropology.

part I|4 pages

Believing The Body

chapter 1|13 pages

The Aesthetics Of Sense-Memory

Theorising trauma through the visual arts 1

chapter 2|15 pages

Stored Virtue

Memory, the body and the evolutionary museum

part II|6 pages

Propping The Subject

chapter 3|15 pages

“No Endlesse Moniment”

Artificial memory and memorial artifact in early modern England

chapter 4|16 pages

Loss

Transmissions, recognitions, authorisations

part III|6 pages

What Memory Forgets: Models of The Mind

chapter 5|18 pages

The Other Inside

Memory as metaphor in psychoanalysis

chapter 6|17 pages

From The Agora To The Junkyard

Social memory and psychic materialities

part IV|36 pages

What History Forgets: Memory and Time

chapter 7|17 pages

‘Already The Past’

Memory and historical time

chapter 8|15 pages

Getting To The Beginning

Identification and concrete thinking in historical consciousness

part V|5 pages

Memory Beyond The Modern

chapter 9|14 pages

Absent-Minded Professors

Etch-a-sketching academic forgetting

chapter 10|16 pages

Given Memory

On mnemonic coercion, reproduction, and invention

chapter 11|15 pages

Memory In A Maussian Universe