Memory: Encounters with the Strange and Familiar

Memory: Encounters with the Strange and Familiar

by JohnScanlan (Author)

Synopsis

Memory is our sense of where we belong, and how we relate and connect to others. We worry that ageing makes us forgetful, because at its worst, forgetting collapses the entire basis of personal and social life. But as technology for computer data storage improves, it seems that whatever anxieties we might have about forgetting particular information, the latest technological fix will allow us to leap into a new future where human limits on remembering become increasingly irrelevant. Why worry about memory, if all that remains is to find robust means of retrieving and reading its 'data'? This book explores how we have come to live with and within 'memory'. It shows how for some philosophers the identity of the self resides in a set of overlapping memories - and one might argue that to be human is to remember - to see oneself as a being in time, with a past and a future. Yet at the same time, by presenting us with our past lives, our memories can undo our present sense of time and place. Moreover, in the digital age we are immersed in a vast archive of data that colours our everyday experiences and supplies us with information on anything we might otherwise have forgotten, arguably breaking down the distinction between the memories of the individual and the collective. Scanlan draws on history, philosophy and technology to offer a sustained investigation of how we can comprehend recollection, whether elusive or vivid. Engaging and inspiring, A Philosophy of Memory explores how the nature of memory itself has been remade over time; and how, as a historical, technological, and collective phenomenon, it is continually remaking everyday life.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 224
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Published: 26 Jul 2013

ISBN 10: 1780231784
ISBN 13: 9781780231785

Media Reviews
Scanlan argues that the digital revolution and . . . the surfeit of available past experience [it produces] threatens to overwhelm the present. The distinction between past and present, between memory and forgetting becomes blurred and undermines any possible sense of tangible reality. We no longer live lives tightly tethered to a particular time and place, but skim along the surfeit of experience, dipping in where and when we please. Scanlan is ambivalent about this new way of living. He sees the potential for playful engagement with the world, but worries about a deepening culture of forgetfulness. Memory: Encounters with the Strange and the Familiar is a useful entry point into the growing scholarship on history and collective memory. For historians of medicine, such work poses a challenge to connect historical accounts of the reductive focus on individual memory as recall in the neurosciences to these broader sociocultural meanings of memory --Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Author Bio
John Scanlan is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Manchester Metropolitan University, UK. He is author of On Garbage (2004) and Van Halen (2012), both published by Reaktion Books.