Vectors of Memory: Legacies of Trauma in Postwar Europe

Vectors of Memory: Legacies of Trauma in Postwar Europe

by NancyWood (Author)

Synopsis

The topic of memory has shot to prominence in recent years, engaging the attention of academics and a wider public alike. This is partly due to a spate of anniversaries and commemorations of events, such as the Holocaust and the Second World War, whose significance for the present is affirmed even as their meanings continue to be debated. In Germany and France, contested memories, representations and commemorations of this period have become virtually a defining feature of their respective political cultures. Equally contested are France's memories of a decolonization process whose legacy still makes its presence felt in the political landscape. This book uses the concept of 'vectors' of memory to designate the conduits of that memorial activity, and examines in detail a range of vectors - historiography, war crimes trials, novels and films - that have focused public attention and debate in this era of so-called 'commemorative obsession'. More than a descriptive summary of such developments, the author elucidates the identity politics that is being expressed through these channels. In the course of these investigations, concepts such as 'sites of memory', 'testimony', and 'trauma' - much invoked in recent work on 'collective memory' - are critically examined in a number of historical, juridical and representational contexts.Interdisciplinary in its scope and in the manner in which it bridgeshistoriographical and cultural analysis, this book will appeal tostudents and scholars of history, cultural and media studies, French and German political culture, Holocaust studies and postcolonialism.

$184.12

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 224
Edition: Illustrated
Publisher: Berg Publishers
Published: 01 Sep 1999

ISBN 10: 1859732895
ISBN 13: 9781859732892
Book Overview: Also available in paperback, 9781859732946 GBP17.99 (September, 1999)

Media Reviews
'A rich scholarly study, efficiently footnoted, accompanied by four appropriate illustrations, and well indexed.' Choice'The essays are often interesting, notably in her comparison of the historiographical methods of the historians of the Jewish massacres, Christopher Browning and Daniel Goldhagen, in relation to the reception of their works and her essay on the role of memory in retributive justice meted out in French trials.'TLS'A significant insight into the dilemmas and contradictions of coming to terms with an unbearable past.'American Historical Review
Author Bio
Nancy Wood University of Sussex