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Media and memory
pp. 113-143
Abstrakt
Cultural memory is unthinkable without media. It would be inconceivable without the role that media play on both levels — the individual and the collective. On the individual level, the sociocultural shaping of organic memories rests to a significant extent on mediation: memory talk between a mother and her child, oral communication within a family, the significance of photographs for media-based (re-)constructions of our childhoods, the influence of mass media and its schemata on way we code life experience. Even more so, memory on the collective level — that is, the construction and circulation of knowledge and versions of a common past in sociocultural contexts — is only possible with the aid of media: through orality and literacy as age-old media for the storing of foundational myths for later generations; through print, radio, television and the Internet for the diffusion of versions of a common past in wide circles of society; and, finally, through symbolically charged media such as monuments which serve as occasions for collective, often ritualized remembering.
Publication details
Published in:
Erll Astrid (2011) Memory in culture. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Seiten: 113-143
Referenz:
Erll Astrid (2011) Media and memory, In: Memory in culture, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 113–143.