1st Edition

Theorizing Social Memories Concepts and Contexts

Edited By Gerd Sebald, Jatin Wagle Copyright 2016
236 Pages
by Routledge

234 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

234 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

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... Read more

Theorizing Social Memories: An introduction, Gerd Sebald & Jatin Wagle  Part I: Concepts  1. Life World and Trauma. Selectivity of Social Memories, Ilja Srubar  2. The Social Construction of Individual and Collective Memory, Gabriele Rosenthal  3. The Forms of the Past: Temporalities, types and memories, Gerd Sebald  Part II: Temporalities  4. Bringing the Future Back in: Temporal registers and the media, Daniel Levy  5. On the Significance of the Past for Present and Future Action, Christian Gudehus  6. The Heterogeneous Time of the Postcolonial: Inverted memories of Hitler in India, Jatin Wagle  Part III: Functions  7. Memory as a Means of Social Integration, Nina Leonhard  8. Social Memory and the Politics of Remembering, Matthias Berek  9. Exploring the Dark Side of Social Memory: Towards a social theory of forgetting, Oliver Dimbat & Peter Wehling  Part IV: Contexts  10. The Forms of Web-Memory, Elena Esposito  11. What is the Context of Memory?, Kobi Kabalek  12. Doing Social Memories: Gendered constructions of refugee narratives, Radhika Natarajan

Biography

Gerd Sebald is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg in Germany. His research is in the area of social memories and the sociology of knowledge. He has recently published Generalisierung und Sinn: Überlegungen zur Formierung sozialer Gedächtnisse und des Sozialen [Generalizations and Meaning: Considerations on the Formation of Social Memories and of the Social] (2014).



Jatin Wagle is Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of Osnabrück in Germany. His doctoral research is on the translatability of T. W. Adorno, and his publications are in the area of Critical Theory.