CfP: Cultural Memory: Forgetting to Remember/Remembering to Forget (Event), Deadline: 29.02.08

Kent Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (KIASH), University of Kent, Canterbury, U.K.

Zeit: 10.-13.09.2008
Ort: Canterbury, U.K.
Deadline: 29.02.2008

Cultural Memory is an area of study which has been extensively developed over the past fifteen years. Numerous conferences, books and series have been dedicated to it. This conference aims to raise the difficult question of whether – in opposition to conventional thinking – societies develop not so much through remembering the past as they do through forgetting it. We seek to turn thinking about modern identity upside down by exploring the relationship between the individual and the social or the private and the public in modern cultures. If one is to understand memory as a personal and collective reality then we must realize that ‘the past is not simply there in memory, but it must be articulated to become memory’ (A Huyssen, Twilight Memories: Marking Time in a Culture of Amnesia). If articulation of the past is forbidden by political or religious pressures or indeed by personal beliefs, then the past is erased from memory. It seeks to explore the traditional assumption that identity is about creating a story or narrative about one’s place in history or what has happened in the past. Could it be that rather than living to remember, as museum cultures might assume, we live in order to forget? Is forgetting or reimagining the past the basis of how cultures survive? Do we make progress in literature, arts and science not by remembering but by deliberately forgetting? Is creativity and self-formation of a life brought about by ‘abandoning’ the past – ‘abandoning’ what we already know in order to establish something new within a cultural life? We ask: Is forgetting a necessary part of functioning under the demands of contemporary modern life? Is the social order allowed to veil memories in order that society may survive by forgetting? To what extent is the construction of individual identity dependent on wider social and cultural life? Does contemporary life require individuals to forget in order to survive? Or is identity (individual and collective) concerned with inventing a narrative about the past? How do architects, film makers and video artists, fine artists, photographers,musicians, and writers contribute to the process of inventing, forgetting and reinventing elements of national and cultural identity?

Related Themes:
Empire and Memory
Fiction of Memory/Memorys Fictions
Myth and Memory
Performance and Memory
Place and Memory
Religion and Collective Memory
Terror and Memory
Testimony and Memory
War and Memory

We welcome proposals from researchers in all disciplines concerned with these issues and themes including Anthropology, Architecture, Art History, English, European and World Literature, Film, Fine Art, History, Philosophy, Politics, Sociology and Theology.

300-word paper abstracts; 500-word proposals for panels including name of panel chair and speakers as well as 750-word proposals for Round Table Discussions in English should be sent electronically by 29 February 2008 to Dr Ana de Medeiros (email: amm#kent.ac.uk)

Kontakt:
Ana de Medeiros
SECL, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NX, U.K.
amm#kent.ac.uk
Website

URL des CfP: http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/id=8576

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