Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- PART I IN MIND, CULTURE, AND HISTORY: A SPECIAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART II HOW DO MEMORIES CONSTRUCT OUR PAST?
- PART III HOW DO WE BUILD SHARED COLLECTIVE MEMORIES?
- PART IV HOW DOES MEMORY SHAPE HISTORY?
- 9 Historical Memories
- 10 The Memory Boom: Why and Why Now?
- 11 Historians and Sites of Memory
- PART V HOW DOES MEMORY SHAPE CULTURE?
- Index
- References
11 - Historians and Sites of Memory
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- PART I IN MIND, CULTURE, AND HISTORY: A SPECIAL PERSPECTIVE
- PART II HOW DO MEMORIES CONSTRUCT OUR PAST?
- PART III HOW DO WE BUILD SHARED COLLECTIVE MEMORIES?
- PART IV HOW DOES MEMORY SHAPE HISTORY?
- 9 Historical Memories
- 10 The Memory Boom: Why and Why Now?
- 11 Historians and Sites of Memory
- PART V HOW DOES MEMORY SHAPE CULTURE?
- Index
- References
Summary
Historians are interested in sites of memory, understood as places where groups of people engage in public activity through which they express “a collective shared knowledge … of the past, on which a group's sense of unity and individuality is based” (Assmann, 1995). The group that goes to such sites inherits earlier meanings attached to the event, as well as adding new meanings. Their activity is crucial to the presentation and preservation of commemorative sites. When such groups disperse or disappear, sites of memory lose their initial force, and may fade away entirely. Thus, historians are more interested in remembrance as a cultural practice than in memory as an individual's capacity to recall or reconfigure the past.
The term, sites of memory, abumbrated in a seven-volume study edited by Pierre Nora (n.d.) has been extended to many different texts, from legends, to stories, to concepts. In this brief essay, I define the term more narrowly to mean physical sites where commemorative acts take place. In the twentieth century, most such sites marked the loss of life in war. It is these sites that have attracted the attention of entire battalions of historians in the past twenty-five years.
What makes such sites of memory attractive for historical research is their character as topoi with a life history. They have an initial, creative phase, when they are constructed or adapted to particular commemorative purposes. Then follows a period of institutionalization and routinization of their use.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Memory in Mind and Culture , pp. 252 - 268Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
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