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E-raamat: Routledge International Handbook of Memory Studies

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The Routledge International Handbook of Memory Studies offers students and researchers original contributions that comprise the debates, intersections and future courses of the field. It is divided in six themed sections:

1)Theories and Perspectives,

2) Cultural artefacts, Symbols and Social practices,

3) Public, Transnational, and Transitional Memories

4) Technologies of Memory,

5) Terror, Violence and Disasters,

6) and Body and Ecosystems.

A strong emphasis is placed on the interdisciplinary breadth of Memory Studies with contributions from leading international scholars in sociology, anthropology, philosophy, biology, film studies, media studies, archive studies, literature and history. The Handbook addresses the core concerns and foundations of the field while indicating new directions in Memory Studies.

Arvustused

"The editors have selected a thought-provoking set of essays that address many of the most important themes and issues within memory studies and contribute exciting new research and ideas to the field. The Handbook invites productive questions about the nature of memory and the field that studies it, and anyone with an interest in memory will find a great deal to appreciate in this volume. The collection also reminds us of the limits of memory studies as a field and may be helpful in establishing disciplinary and conceptual boundaries around memory as an object of study. For all of these reasons it is a valuable and interesting read and a worthy addition to the growing canon."

- Amy Sodaro, Department of Sociology, Borough of Manhattan Community College/CUNY

List of illustrations
ix
List of contributors
xi
Acknowledgements xix
Emilio Del Giudice: Renaissance man and scientist of the highest distinction xxi
Gerald H. Pollack
Introduction: memory work -- naming pasts, transforming futures 1(6)
Anna Lisa Tota
Trever Hagen
PART I Theories and perspectives
7(70)
1 Rethinking the concept of collective memory
9(13)
Barry Schwartz
2 Reconceptualizing memory as event: from "difficult pasts" to "restless events"
22(6)
Robin Wagner-Pacifici
3 Pierre Nora's Les Lieux de memoire thirty years after
28(13)
Patrick H. Hutton
4 Sites of memory studies (Lieux des etudes de memoire)
41(12)
Jeffrey K. Olick
5 Against memory
53(12)
Jeffrey Goldfarb
6 Cultural memory studies: mediation, narrative, and the aesthetic
65(12)
Ann Rigney
PART II Cultural artifacts, symbols and social practices
77(64)
7 Social movements and memory
79(5)
Ron Eyerman
8 Banal commemoration
84(9)
Vered Vinitzky-Seroussi
9 Organizational memories: a phenomenological analysis
93(16)
Thomas S. Eberle
10 Memory, time and responsibility
109(12)
Carmen Leccardi
11 Memories of the future
121(10)
Paolo Jedlowski
12 Housing spirits: the grave as an exemplary site of memory
131(10)
Hans Ruin
PART III Public, transnational and transitional memories
141(78)
13 Globalization and/of memory: on the complexification and contestation of memory cultures and practices
143(15)
David Inglis
14 The afterlife and renaissance of the Plastic People of the (twenty--first--century) Universe: continuity and memory in Bohemia
158(10)
Trever Hagen
15 The reciprocal relation of scandal to collective memory
168(13)
Mark D. Jacobs
16 Antigone in Leon: the drama of trauma politics
181(12)
Alejandro Baer
Natan Sznaider
17 Urban spaces, city cultures, and collective memories
193(12)
Kevin Loughran
Gary Alan Fine
Marcus Anthony Hunter
18 Digital trauma archives: the Yellow Star Houses Project
205(14)
Gabriella Ivacs
PART IV Technologies of memory
219(108)
19 Cultural heritage: tangible and intangible markers of collective memory
221(12)
Diane Barthel-Bouchier
20 Remembering through music: Turkish diasporic identities in Berlin
233(14)
Pinar Guran-Aydin
Tia DeNora
21 Cinema and memory studies: now, then and tomorrow
247(12)
Carrie Collenberg-Gonzalez
22 Memory and future selves in futurist dystopian cinema: The Road (2010) and The Book of Eli (2010)
259(13)
E. Ann Kaplan
23 "The mirror with a memory": placing photography in memory studies
272(16)
Olga Shevchenko
24 Bone, steel and stone: reification and transformation in Holocaust memorials
288(23)
Zachary Metz
25 Walking the autobiographical path: the spatial dimension of remembering in a memoir by Italo Calvino
311(16)
Alessandra Fasulo
PART V Terror, violence and disasters
327(116)
26 Southeast Asia and the politics of contested memories
329(16)
Kwok Kian-Woon
Roxana Waterson
27 Japanese war memories and commemoration after the Great East Japan Earthquake
345(12)
Philip Seaton
28 Disaster, trauma, and memory
357(14)
Bin Xu
29 Memory and the recent past: Chile, from revolution to repression
371(11)
Isabel Torres Dujisin
30 An `unaccomplished memory': the period of the `strategy of tension' in Italy (1969--1993) and the Piazza Fontana bombing in Milan
382(16)
Lia Luchetti
Anna Lisa Tota
31 Making absence present: the September 11 Memorial
398(16)
Alexandra Delano
Benjamin Nienass
32 The Madrid 2004 bombing: understanding the puzzle of 11-M's flawed commemorative process
414(14)
Cristina Flesher Fominaya
33 Remembering 7/7: the collective shaping of survivors' personal memories of the 2005 London bombing
428(15)
Steven D. Brown
Matthew Allen
Paula Reavey
PART VI Body and ecosystems
443(90)
34 When memory goes awry
445(13)
Maria I. Medved
Jens Brockmeier
35 Dancing the present: body memory and quantum field theory
458(15)
Anna Lisa Tota
36 Implicit memory, emotional experience and self--regulation: the heart's role in raising our consciousness baseline
473(16)
Rollin McCraty
37 Cell memory of an ancestral state: going backward across our life span to resume self-healing abilities
489(11)
Carlo Ventura
38 Memory of water: storage of information and spontaneous growth of knowledge
500(11)
Emilio Del Giudice
Alberto Tedeschi
Vladimir Voeikov
39 The importance of memory in ecology
511(8)
Sven Erik Jorgensen
40 Soundscapes as commemoration and imagination of the acoustic past
519(14)
Jan Marontate
Megan Robertson
Nathan Clarkson
Index 533
Anna Lisa Tota is Full Professor in the Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts of the University Rome III in Rome.

Trever Hagen is a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow at the Department of Sociology, Philosophy, Anthropology of the University of Exeter.