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Processes & Social Forms of Remembering & Shaping Memories Collective Memory and Public Discourse School of Communication, SFU, Spring 2007 Professor: Jan Marontate African Drum Workshop, Healing Weekend, Black Loyalist Heritage Site, Nova Scotia, 2006 Recall: Course Administration Handout # 1: Syllabus, Grading, Schedule Course Website Handout #2: Partial List of Readings for Weeks 1-4 Salvador Dali, The Persistence of Memory, 1931 Last Day: Core concepts in Studies of Collective Memory Focus on – History of scholarly work on “collective memory” and origins of early interests – Terminology & related issues – Early Interest in Collective Memory: Social Construction of ’Knowledge’ & Individual/Society – Memory as a “social fact” & the social frameworks of memory What constitutes a “Site of Memory”? "where [cultural] memory crystallizes and secretes itself" (Nora 1989: 7) places archives, museums, cathedrals, palaces, cemeteries, and memorials; concepts and practices commemorations, generations, Mottos rituals; objects inherited property – mementos monuments manuals, emblems, basic texts symbols. Non-places, Silencing: Memories of Amish Schoolhouse Killings Site where children were killed Destruction of Amish Schoolhouse Innovations as Rejection of Memories of the Past or revivals? – Invention of new ceremonies – new “fashions” (today could it be rejection of the burka?) Typology of Memory Claims (Connerton) 1-Personal Memory – Sources: Connections with individual’s life history 2-Cognitive memory – Not necessary about the past but enabled by something we have learned to help us decipher past, present & future 3-Habit Memory – Performative but not necessarily grounded in specifiv memories Discussion of Last week’s Film Screening Rabbit-Proof Fence – Fact-based story Personal Memories? Collective Memories? Today: Processes & Forms Historical notions – memory as “positive” – way of preserving knowledge & skill ways of life – sense of identity Assumptions about mnemonic traces – Cognitive vs. unconscious processes – Time Maps as ways of making connections (Zerubavel) “Time Maps” & the Social Shaping of Memory Discourses Questions of relevance Long and short term (Annales School notion of longue durée) Making connections Delimiting discontinuities Example: Plotlines & Narrative Forms Progress narratives Decline narratives (examples from Zerubavel Time Maps) Historical “Phrasing” in Narratives Legato (connected) Staccato (breaks) “Triggers”, memory retrieval (types of Mnemonic devices) – Words, facts, skills, events – Ideals, goals, intentions, promises – Feelings, states-of-mind, earlier selves etc… – Things, odours, ex. Madeleine (Proust, Remembrance of things past, triggered by smell and taste of Madeleines, a style of French cupcake) Varieties of Personal Memory What do we become aware of when we remember and how do we do it? (David Gross Lost Time, 2000) – – – – – Semantic memory (words) Propositional memories (kinds of Info.) Implicit memories (ex. How to play an instrument) Episodic memory (beginning & end, aura) Other kinds Projects (Odysseus and faithfulness to project of returning home) Revisionist (confessions) Happy/sad episodes, feelings & emotions (ex. Proust) – Amnesia (deliberate, unconscious etc..) Biography (Personal & Collective Dimensions) Biography & Autobiography as ways of creating relationships – Discursive process that shapes memories Example: Rabbit-proof fence – – – – Fact-based film Historical reconstructions Personal? experiences of group(s) of people (mnemonic communities)? - other perspectives? Ways of mapping personal to collective memories Family, ancestry & descent Dynasty – Not always based on consanguinity as historical contact chains as continuous structures Interconnectedness Genealogical Distance (consanguinity) Ancestral depth (# of generations) Ancestral Depth Tracing “Families” over time Not just people Can be practices, things, events Monogenist & Polygenist Models of Human Descent Direct ancestors Socio-mnemonic dimensions of ancestry Phylogeny Divergence Modelling Mnemonic Cutting Conceptualizing Discontinuities (breaks) Association/assimilation Periods, epochs as mnemonic transformation of historical continuum History & Prehistory in Mnemonic Traditions Example: Pre-contact and Post contact history of N. American Discussion of Fieldwork: ideas for term work by –1-Viewing one of each a documentary film a « fact-based » fictionalized film Must be about past events (can be very recent past) or the history of a group, a place etc….something that involves sharing memories –2-Doing « fieldwork ». Visiting an historic site, reconstruction or public monument or building that is intended to commemorate or express memories of a group or event. Vilm Clip Screening: The Return of Martin Guerre Personal story of impersonation? Framing collective memories of the past?