Memory and Modernity

Memory and Modernity
Author: William Rowe,Vivian Schelling
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 272
Release: 1991
Genre: History
ISBN: UOM:39015021859254

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Samba and carnival, radio soaps and telenovelas, oral poetry, popular drama, Amerindian art. This illustrated overview of Latin America's popular culture considers the broad spectrum of cultural forms in the various countries of the subcontinent. Exploring the ways in which daily life and ritual have resisted and been influenced by Western mass culture, Memory and Modernity traces the main anthropological, sociological and political debates about the nature of popular culture. Rowe and Schelling use their analysis of the development of a culture industry in Latin America to engage with wider debates about modernity, drawing out the contrast between Latin America's cultural wealth and its widespread material poverty. In challenging the assumptions of much Western cultural criticism, this book will be essential reading for students of Latin American society, while offering the general reader a concise and accessible overview of an exciting and varied popular culture.

Memory before Modernity

Memory before Modernity
Author: Erika Kuijpers,Judith Pollmann,Johannes Mueller,Jasper van der Steen
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2013-12-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004261259

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This volume examines the practice of memory in early modern Europe, showing that this was already a multimedia affair with many political uses, and affecting people at all levels of society; many pre-modern memory practices persist until today.

Memory and Modernity

Memory and Modernity
Author: Kevin D. Murphy,Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc
Publsiher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 226
Release: 1999
Genre: Architects
ISBN: 0271041919

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Cinema Memory Modernity

Cinema  Memory  Modernity
Author: Russell J.A. Kilbourn
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2013-10-18
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 9781134550159

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Since its inception, cinema has evolved into not merely a ‘reflection’ but an indispensable index of human experience – especially our experience of time’s passage, of the present moment, and, most importantly perhaps, of the past, in both collective and individual terms. In this volume, Kilbourn provides a comparative theorization of the representation of memory in both mainstream Hollywood and international art cinema within an increasingly transnational context of production and reception. Focusing on European, North and South American, and Asian films, Kilbourn reads cinema as providing the viewer with not only the content and form of memory, but also with its own directions for use: the required codes and conventions for understanding and implementing this crucial prosthetic technology — an art of memory for the twentieth-century and beyond.

Present Past

Present Past
Author: Richard Terdiman
Publsiher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 405
Release: 2018-05-31
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781501717604

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This book is about memory—about how the past persists into the present, and about how this persistence has been understood over the past two centuries. Since the French Revolution, memory has been the source of an intense disquiet. Fundamental cultural theories have sought to understand it, and have striven to represent its stresses.

The Senses Still

The Senses Still
Author: C. Nadia Seremetakis,C Nadia Seremetakis
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2019-07-09
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781000305432

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How can culture and experience be conceptualized when theorists drag social meaning back and forth between institutions, objects, or acts, as if the dense communication between persons and things were only a quick exchange between surfaces? This volume challenges mentalist approaches to material culture through the historical and ethnographic analyses of sensory memory. The sensory landscape and its meaning-endowed objects bear within them emotional and historical sedimentation that pose crucial questions: What cultural practices enable the sensory-affective experience of history? How does the history of perception speak to the perception of history? The editor, in her four essays, discusses sensory memory as a cultural form not limited to the psychic apparatus of a monadic, pre-cultural, and ahistorical subject but embedded and embodied in a dispersed surround of created things, surfaces, depths, and densities that are stratigraphic sites of sensory biography and history. The volume demonstrates that any ethnographic discussion of the senses involves a priori claims about modernity. Thus the senses are explored in contemporary political and racial violence, exchange practices, the emotions, national identity, food-ways, spatial organization, leisure activity, and the electronic media. Well-known authors examine personal and social investments in objects and substances as the tip of a submerged collective language of materiality that firmly grasps the mutable structure of contemporary experience. Social memory is treated as a meta-sensory organ and shown to be a culturally mediated performance that is activated by material acts and emotionally tangible artifacts.

Memory in Early Modern Europe 1500 1800

Memory in Early Modern Europe  1500 1800
Author: Judith Pollmann
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2017-08-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780192518149

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For early modern Europeans, the past was a measure of most things, good and bad. For that reason it was also hotly contested, manipulated, and far too important to be left to historians alone. Memory in Early Modern Europe offers a lively and accessible introduction to the many ways in which Europeans engaged with the past and 'practised' memory in the three centuries between 1500 and 1800. From childhood memories and local customs to war traumas and peacekeeping , it analyses how Europeans tried to control, mobilize and reconfigure memories of the past. Challenging the long-standing view that memory cultures transformed around 1800, it argues for the continued relevance of early modern memory practices in modern societies.

Transcultural Memory and Globalised Modernity in Contemporary Indo English Novels

Transcultural Memory and Globalised Modernity in Contemporary Indo English Novels
Author: Nadia Butt
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2015-09-14
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783110387117

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This book places transcultural memory in the South Asian cultural and literary context. Divided into two parts, the book first defines transcultural memory in the age of globalised modernity both as a theory and social practice. Then it examines contemporary Indo-English novels from India and Pakistan with the theoretical and methodological tool of transcultural memory to shed new light on the connection between memory and modernity, and memory and South Asian cultures in the wake of new social and political transformations on the Indian subcontinent. A special focus on commemorative tropes in the novels not only show the possibility of a dialogue with different versions of the past, but also how such a dialogue shapes processes of remembrance between and beyond borders. Hence, the books comes up with alternative ways of reading the Indo-English novels, divesting the concept of (trans)cultural memory from its Euro- centrism and claiming it as equally significant in comprehending the new configurations of memory and modernity in non-Western locations.