Max Scheler
Gesellschaft

Repository | Series | Buch | Kapitel

202171

The mnemonic imagination

Emily KeightleyMichael Pickering

pp. 43-80

Abstrakt

We have spoken so far of certain pitfalls associated with thinking about the relationship between memory and imagination, and suggested that we want to see this relationship in terms of an interstitial space between past and future in which cross-temporal transactions are made. It is through such transactions that lived experience in the present becomes transformed into assimilated experience in a changed present. The remembering subject engages imaginatively with what is retained from the past and, moving across time, continuously rearranges the hotchpotch of experience into relatively coherent narrative structures, the varied elements of what is carried forward being given meaning by becoming emplotted into a discernible sequential pattern. It is that pattern which is central to the definition of who we are and how we have changed.

Publication details

Published in:

Keightley Emily, Pickering Michael (2012) The mnemonic imagination: remembering as creative practice. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Seiten: 43-80

DOI: 10.1057/9781137271549_3

Referenz:

Keightley Emily, Pickering Michael (2012) The mnemonic imagination, In: The mnemonic imagination, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 43–80.