Multidirectional Memory

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2009-06-15
Publisher(s): Stanford Univ Pr
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Summary

What happens when different histories confront each other in the public sphere? Does the remembrance of one history erase others from view? When memories of slavery and colonialism bump up against memories of the Holocaust in contemporary multicultural societies, must a competition of victims ensue? Multidirectional Memory addresses these vexing questions by advancing a new theory of remembrance that challenges the basic tenets of current thinking on cultural memory and group identity. Most discussions of the relationship between memory and identity today are based on a zero-sum logic in which the evocation of one group's history is said to block other groups' histories from view. Rothberg contrasts this model of "competitive memory" with a theory of "multidirectional memory" that redescribes the public sphere as a field of contestation where memories interact productively and in unexpected ways. By making visible an intellectual and artistic countertradition that links memories of genocide and colonialism, he reveals how the public articulation of collective memory by marginalized and oppositional social groups provides resources for other groups to stake their own claims for recognition and justice. Book jacket.

Author Biography

Michael Rothberg is Professor of English and Director of the Unit for Criticism and Interpretive Theory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is the author of Traumatic Realism: The Demands of Holocaust Representation (2000).

Table of Contents

List of Illustrationsp. xi
Acknowledgmentsp. xiii
Introduction: Theorizing Multidirectional Memory in a Transnational Agep. 1
Boomerang Effects: Bare Life, Trauma, and the Colonial Turn in Holocaust Studies
At the Limits of Eurocentrism: Hannah Arendt's The Origins of Totalitarianismp. 33
"Un Choc en Retour": Aimé Césaire's Discourses on Colonialism and Genocidep. 66
Migrations of Memory: Ruins, Ghettos, Diasporas
W. E. B. Du Bois in Warsaw: Holocaust Memory and the Color Linep. 111
Anachronistic Aesthetics: André Schwarz-Bart and Caryl Phillips on the Ruins of Memoryp. 135
Truth, Torture, Testimony: Holocaust Memory During the Algerian War
The Work of Testimony in the Age of Decolonization: Chronicle of a Summer and the Emergence of the Holocaust Survivorp. 175
The Counterpublic Witness: Charlotte Delbo's Les belles lettresp. 199
October 17, 1961: A Site of Holocaust Memory?
A Tale of Three Ghettos: Race, Gender, and "Universality" After October 17, 1961p. 227
Hidden Children: The Ethics of Multigenerational Memory After 1961p. 267
Epilogue: Multidirectional Memory in an Age of Occupationsp. 309
Notesp. 315
Indexp. 365
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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