Collective Memory and the Historical Past

Collective Memory and the Historical Past

by Jeffrey Andrew Barash
Collective Memory and the Historical Past

Collective Memory and the Historical Past

by Jeffrey Andrew Barash

Paperback

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Overview

There is one critical way we honor great tragedies: by never forgetting. Collective remembrance is as old as human society itself, serving as an important source of social cohesion, yet as Jeffrey Andrew Barash shows in this book, it has served novel roles in a modern era otherwise characterized by discontinuity and dislocation. Drawing on recent theoretical explorations of collective memory, he elaborates an important new philosophical basis for it, one that unveils profound limitations to its scope in relation to the historical past.
           
Crucial to Barash’s analysis is a look at the radical transformations that symbolic configurations of collective memory have undergone with the rise of new technologies of mass communication. He provocatively demonstrates how such technologies’ capacity to simulate direct experience—especially via the image—actually makes more palpable collective memory’s limitations and the opacity of the historical past, which always lies beyond the reach of living memory. Thwarting skepticism, however, he eventually looks to literature—specifically writers such as Walter Scott, Marcel Proust, and W. G. Sebald—to uncover subtle nuances of temporality that might offer inconspicuous emblems of a past historical reality.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226758466
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 11/29/2020
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Jeffrey Andrew Barash is professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Amiens in France. He is the author or editor of many books, including Martin Heidegger and the Problem of Historical Meaning and The Social Construction of Reality: The Legacy of Ernst Cassirer, the latter published by the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

Introduction
The Sources of Memory

Part 1   Symbolic Embodiment, Imagination, and the “Place” of Collective Memory
1          Is Collective Memory a Figment of the Imagination? The Scope of Memory in the Public Sphere
2          Analyzing Collective Memory 
3          Thresholds of Personal Identity and Public Experience 

Excursus          Critical Reflections: The Contemporary Theories of Ricœur, Edelman, and Nora

Part 2   Time, Collective Memory, and the Historical Past
4          Temporal Articulations 
5          Virtual Experience, the Mass Media, and the Configuration of the Public Sphere 
6          The Contextualized Past: Collective Memory and Historical Understanding 
Conclusion      The Province of Collective Memory and Its Theoretical Promise 
Notes
Bibliography 
Index
 

What People are Saying About This

Doron Mendels

“Barash has not left any of the different disciplines of the humanities and social sciences untouched. Through this convincing treatise, he has brought our understanding of collective memory a great step forward. This is a pathbreaking work, extremely original and containing a wealth of analytical narrative embedded in a comprehensive world of knowledge. It is a masterpiece of scholarship.”

Ethan Kleinberg

Collective Memory and the Historical Past is a must-read for scholars of the past, no matter their approach. In this comprehensive and lucid study, Barash tackles the most vexing questions that have plagued the fields of history and memory studies alike. Barash’s work is vibrant and thought-provoking, and it inspires the reader to contemplate the ways that ‘collective memory’ and the ‘historical past’ overlap, interweave, and yet must be seen as separate and distinctly defined categories.  In so doing, Barash develops an original theoretical approach to the phenomenon of collective memory that defines it precisely but also delimits the scope of the concept in relation to the historical past. It is a major accomplishment and the first intervention of its kind.”

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