Portable Monuments: Literature, Cultural Memory and the Case of Jeanie Deans
Publication date
2004-06-18
Authors
Rigney, A.
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DOI
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
This article seeks to contribute to contemporary discussions on the workings
of cultural memory and examines in particular the way inwhich literary texts can
function as a social framework for memory.Through a detailed study of the genesis,
composition, and long-term reception of Walter Scott’s The Heart of Midlothian (1982
[1818]), I argue that literary texts play a variety of roles in the formation of cultural
memory and that these roles are linked to their status as public discourse, to their
fictional and poetical qualities, and to their longevity. This analysis of the multiple
roles of literary texts in what I call ‘‘memorial dynamics’’ sheds light on the complex
communicative processes by which images of the past are formed and transformed
over time. It indicates the need to consider discontinuity as a feature of memorial
dynamics and to recognize, for better or for worse, that fictionality and poeticity are
an integral and not merely ‘‘inauthentic’’ feature of cultural memory.