Memory Studies: Global Constellations
About the Book 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.
Between the Memory and Post-Memory of Communism in Romania: Fluid Memories
1st Edition
Edited
By Monica Ciobanu, Mihaela Şerban
May 27, 2025
The first of its kind, this book traces the construction of post-memory in post-communist Romania. Focusing on the processes, gaps, agents, and contradictions of post-memory, it examines a range of topics across a variety of disciplines, addressing questions of museums and musealization, law and ...
Perverse Memory and the Holocaust: A Psychoanalytic Understanding of Polish Bystanders
1st Edition
By Jan Borowicz
May 27, 2025
Perverse Memory and the Holocaust presents a new theoretical approach to the study of Polish memory bystanders of the Holocaust. Drawing on psychoanalytic theory, it examines representations of the Holocaust in order to explore the perverse mechanisms of memory at work, in which surface a series of...
The Portuguese Colonial War and the African Liberation Struggles: Memory, Politics and Uses of the Past
1st Edition
Edited
By Miguel Cardina
December 18, 2024
The Portuguese Colonial War and the African Liberation Struggles: Memory, Politics and Uses of the Past presents a critical and comparative analysis on the memory of the colonial and liberation wars that led to a regime change in Portugal and to the independence of five new African countries: ...
Memory Institutions and Sámi Heritage: Decolonization, Restitution, and Rematriation in Sápmi
1st Edition
Edited
By Trude Fonneland, Rossella Ragazzi
December 09, 2024
With a focus on Sápmi – the transcultural and transnational homeland of the Sámi people – this book presents case studies and theoretical frameworks which explore the ways in which memory institutions such as museums, archives, and festivals participate in and guide processes of appropriation, ...
Forgetting Polish Violence Against the Jews: The Great Whitewash
1st Edition
By Tomasz Żukowski
November 29, 2024
During the Holocaust, Polish bystanders were witnesses not only to Nazi crimes but also to their own collective violence toward Jewish neighbors. This book shows how these memories continue to be distorted and silenced in the Polish culture. Considering the ways in which Polish culture displays ...
Intergenerational Trauma in Refugee Communities
1st Edition
Edited
By Laura Kromják, Ajlina Karamehić-Muratović
November 08, 2024
This volume explores intergenerational trauma among refugee communities displaced throughout the world. Considering patterns and findings across disciplines, cultural contexts, and methodologies, the volume addresses the way trauma is passed on generationally among populations characterized by a ...
Memory Fragmentation from Below and Beyond the State: Uses of the Past in Conflict and Post-conflict Settings
1st Edition
Edited
By Anne Bazin, Emmanuelle Hébert, Valérie Rosoux, Eric Sangar
October 08, 2024
This volume suggests a model of collective memory that distinguishes between two conceptual logics of memory fragmentation: vertical fragmentation and horizontal fragmentation. It offers a series of case studies of conflict and post-conflict collective memory, shedding light on the ways various ...
The Legacies of Soviet Repression and Displacement: The Multiple and Mobile Lives of Memories
1st Edition
Edited
By Samira Saramo, Ulla Savolainen
October 04, 2024
This book explores the ways in which memories of Stalin-era repression and displacement manifest across times and places through diverse forms of materialization. The chapters of the book explore the concrete mobilities of life stories, letters, memoirs, literature, objects, and bodies reflecting ...
Memory and Identity: Ghosts of the Past in the English-speaking World
1st Edition
Edited
By Linda Pillière, Karine Bigand
May 27, 2024
This book examines the ways in which ghosts haunt and shape cultural identities and memory, considering the manner in which the fluctuations of such identities sometimes imply the rethinking or rewriting of the past. Drawing on case studies in historical, political, literary and linguistic studies,...
Remembering the Liberation Struggles in Cape Verde: A Mnemohistory
1st Edition
By Miguel Cardina, Inês Nascimento Rodrigues
May 27, 2024
Remembering the Liberation Struggles in Cape Verde: A Mnemohistory takes as its reference from the anti-colonial struggles against the Portuguese colonial empire in Africa in the 1960s and 1970s and the ways this period has been publicly remembered. Drawing on original and detailed empirical ...
Commemorating Muslims in the First World War Centenary: Making Melancholia
1st Edition
By Meghan Tinsley
September 25, 2023
Commemorating Muslims in the First World War Centenary engages with the explosion of public commemorations in Britain and France in the wake of the First World War centenary, alongside the hyper-visibility of British and French Muslims in political and popular discourse. Bringing these two ...
Contemporary Auschwitz/Oświęcim: An Interactional, Synchronic Approach to Collective Memory
1st Edition
By Thomas Van de Putte
May 31, 2023
This book presents an innovative theoretical and empirical approach to the present attributions of meaning to the past. Based on the author’s fieldwork in the contemporary Polish town of Oświęcim – Auschwitz, in German – it observes the manner in which residents remember and narrate the past of ...