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Memory Studies: Global Constellations


About the Series

Memory Studies as an academic field of cultural inquiry emerges at a time when global public debates, buttressed by the fragmentation of nation states and their traditional narratives, have greatly accelerated. Societies are today pregnant with newly unmediated memories, once sequestered in broad collective representations and their ideological stances. But, the ‘past in the present’ has returned with a vengeance in the early 21st Century, and with it an expansion of categories of cultural experience and meaning. This new series explores the social and cultural stakes around forgetting, useful forgetting and remembering, locally, regionally, nationally and globally. It welcomes studies of migrant memory from failed states; micro-histories battling against collective memories; the mnemonic past of emotions; the mnemonic spatiality of sites of memory; and the reconstructive ethics of memory in the face of galloping informationalization, as this renders the ‘mnemonic’ more and more public and publically accessible.

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Traumatic Storytelling and Memory in Post-Apartheid South Africa Performing Signs of Injury

Traumatic Storytelling and Memory in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Performing Signs of Injury

1st Edition

By Christopher J. Colvin
December 11, 2018

This book explores the practice of traumatic storytelling that emerged out of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission and came to play a key role in the lives of the members of the Khulumani Support Group for victims of apartheid-era political violence. Group members found traumatic ...

Reckoning with the Past Family Historiographies in Postcolonial Australian Literature

Reckoning with the Past: Family Historiographies in Postcolonial Australian Literature

1st Edition

By Ashley Barnwell, Joseph Cummins
December 03, 2018

This is the first book to examine how Australian fiction writers draw on family histories to reckon with the nation’s colonial past. Located at the intersection of literature, history, and sociology, it explores the relationships between family storytelling, memory, and postcolonial identity. With ...

Memory and Genocide On What Remains and the Possibility of Representation

Memory and Genocide: On What Remains and the Possibility of Representation

1st Edition

Edited By Fazil Moradi, Ralph Buchenhorst, Maria Six-Hohenbalken
October 18, 2018

This book focuses on the ethical, aesthetic, and scholarly dimensions of how genocide-related works of art, documentary films, poetry and performance, museums and monuments, music, dance, image, law, memory narratives, spiritual bonds, and ruins are translated and take place as translations of acts...

Transitional Justice and Memory in Cambodia Beyond the Extraordinary Chambers

Transitional Justice and Memory in Cambodia: Beyond the Extraordinary Chambers

1st Edition

By Peter Manning
October 18, 2018

Memories of violence, suffering and atrocities in Cambodia are today being pulled in different directions. A range of transitional justice practices have been put to work in the name of redressing, restoring and renewing memory. At the centre of this stage is the Extraordinary Chambers in the ...

The Slave Ship, Memory and the Origin of Modernity

The Slave Ship, Memory and the Origin of Modernity

1st Edition

By Martyn Hudson
May 09, 2018

Traces; slave names, the islands and cities into which we are born, our musics and rhythms, our genetic compositions, our stories of our lost utopias and the atrocities inflicted upon our ancestors, by our ancestors, the social structure of our cities, the nature of our diasporas, the scars ...

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