Print

Print


italian-studies: Scholarly discussions in any field of Italian studies

Transcultural Memory

 

A conference jointly organized by the Department of English and
Comparative Literature, Goldsmiths, University of London, and The Centre
for the Study of Cultural Memory, Institute of Germanic & Romance
Studies, University of London 

This conference marks the inauguration of The Centre for the Study of
Cultural Memory.

Date:  5-6th February, 2010. 

Conference organizers: Lucy Bond, Rick Crownshaw and Jessica Rapson
(Goldsmiths); Katia Pizzi and Ricarda Vidal (Institute of Germanic and
Romance Studies).

Venue: Institute of Germanic and Romance Studies, University of London

Keynote speakers: 

Astrid Erll (University of Wuppertal)

Andrew Hoskins (University of Warwick)

Dirk Moses (University of Sydney)

Michael Rothberg (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)

Discussant:

Susannah Radstone (University of East London)

 

Skeptical reactions to the rise of memory studies have focused on the
viability of concepts such as "collective" memory. Can societies really
remember collectively? More to the point, can individuals really
remember what they have not directly witnessed or experienced? Is to
speak of collective memory simply to speak of ideology or political
fantasy? The concept of cultural memory has overcome this binary
opposition between the individual and the collective, attending to their
reciprocal relationship and the cultural grounds on which their
mediation takes place (Assman). How, though, does memory work when
events are remembered across and between cultures? In an age of
globalization, is it still possible to speak of local and national
memory, or do the local and national always exist in implicit and
explicit dialogue with the transnational? Holocaust- and memory studies
have begun to address these questions in tracing the globalization of
Holocaust memory as a trope by which other modern atrocities are shaped
and remembered, and, of course, the Holocaust has been incorporated into
national memories in order to forget indigenous genocides and shore up
ideals of nation (Huyssen and Patraka). Conversely, theories of
vicarious witnessing have posited an ethical dimension to the
remembrance of events across cultural boundaries. The ideas of
"prosthetic" and "post" memory conceive of the remembrance of events not
witnessed by those born afterwards or elsewhere, and of mass- mediated
memory as something that does not wholly belong to (and define) the
familial, ethnic or national group (Hirsch and Landsberg). (The idea of
witnessing across cultural borders has not been without controversy in
the academy.) Recent innovations in comparative historiography (Moses,
Stone, Moshman), laying vital groundwork for developments in memory
studies, have sought to remove the "conceptual blockages" in comparing
modern atrocities, moving beyond notions of the Holocaust's uniqueness
that might inscribe a hierarchy of suffering across modernity, eliciting
the structural continuities and discontinuities between atrocious events
- between genocide and colonialism. Just as Moses has configured
modernity in terms of a racial century, so in sociology and literary
studies race has constituted an overarching narrative that brings
together diverse modern spheres of both culturally creative and violent
activity and identification (Cheyette and Gilroy). In postcolonial
studies, concepts such as trauma have enabled a spatial rather than
linear approach to the experiences of colony and postcolony (Durrant).
In philosophy, conceptions of 'bare life' have allowed an international
consideration of state sovereignties and their biopolitical regimes
(Agamben). In architectural and urban studies, city development and its
architecture is found to articulate a globalized vernacular, which has
implications for spaces and places of memory and memorialization. All of
these disciplines find that it is increasingly difficult and problematic
to isolate representations of past, which in turn calls attention to the
need for the comparative study of memory as it takes an increasingly
transcultural form - as Rothberg's recent ground-breaking work on the
multi-directionality of memory has shown. The conference organizers
invite abstracts on the subject of transcultural memory from across the
disciplines -  English and Comparative Literary Studies, History,
Cultural Studies, Architectural Studies, Cultural Geography, Film
Studies, Media Studies, Politics, Philosophy, Psychology, Sociology, the
Visual Arts, and so on - but recognize that the study of memory will
often involve an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approach. 

 

Conference papers might address but are not limited to how concepts of
transcultural memory might relate to:

 

new directions/new paradigms in trauma studies;

testimony studies; 

new media; 

new technologies of historical documentation and archivization;

memory as performed and embodied; memory and the senses;

conceptions of race; citizenship; 'bare life';

postwar, post-event, post-epochal 'structures of feeling' (e.g.,
post-1918, -1945,  -1968, -1989 and -9/11); 

the recent interest in the perspective of perpetrators; 

memory and gender; 

memory and religion; 

colonial, postcolonial, and transatlantic studies;

the study of museums, monuments, and memorials, as well as the practical
implications for heritage industries, memorialization and urban planning

issues of law, justice and reparations; legal definitions of genocide;

slavery;

the relationship between genocides and other modern atrocities; 

memory and terrorism;

the social implications of natural catastrophes and disasters. 

 

Abstracts (no more than 400 words) by July 21st, to
[log in to unmask]

Conference website: http://igrs.sas.ac.uk/index.php?id=377

 

 

Flo Austin

Institute Administrator

Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies

School of Advanced Study, University of London Senate House, Malet
Street, London WC1E 7HU

Tel: 020 7862 8677; fax 020 7862 8672

Web: http://igrs.sas.ac.uk <http://igrs.sas.ac.uk>   

 

NB Please be aware that I work part-time - Tues/Thurs/Fri - so there may
be some delay in responding to your email

 

 

 

 


**********************************************************************
To join the list, send the message: join italian-studies YOUR NAME
to: [log in to unmask]
To send a message to the list, address it to:
[log in to unmask]
To leave the list, send the message: leave italian-studies
to: [log in to unmask]
In order to report problems or to contact the list's owners, write to:
[log in to unmask]
For further information, visit our web site:
http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/italian-studies.html