Plenitude, Scarcity, and the Production of Cultural Memory
Publication date
2005
Authors
Rigney, A.
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DOI
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
An argument is made for the need to conceptualize cultural memory, not
as merely derivative of individual psychology, but in terms of a ‘working
memory’ (Assmann) that is constructed and reconstructed in public acts
of remembrance and evolves according to distinctly cultural mechanisms.
Foucault’s ‘scarcity principle’ is used to show the role of media in
generating shared memories through processes of selection, convergence,
recursivity and transfer. This media-based approach, emphasizing the
way memories are communicated, circulated and exchanged, allows us to
see how collective identities may be (re)defined through memorial
practices, and not merely reflected in them.
Keywords
memorial media, memory frameworks, memory transfer, recursive remembrance, sites of memory