10% off all books and free delivery over £40
Buy from our bookstore and 25% of the cover price will be given to a school of your choice to buy more books. *15% of eBooks.

Collective Memory and the Historical Past

View All Editions

£29.00 £26.10

In Stock. Same day dispatch on orders before 3pm.

Add To Wishlist
Write A Review

About

Collective Memory and the Historical Past Synopsis

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.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780226758466
Publication date: 5th February 2021
Author: Jeffrey Andrew Barash
Publisher: The University of Chicago Press an imprint of University of Chicago Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 280 pages
Genres: History: theory and methods