How Societies Remember: Presented by Sharon Kalman, Sacha Page and Jennifer Stevenson
How Societies Remember: Presented by Sharon Kalman, Sacha Page and Jennifer Stevenson
How Societies Remember: Presented by Sharon Kalman, Sacha Page and Jennifer Stevenson
Social Memory
Using Halbwachs as a starting point he asserts that memory is a socially constructed phenomena. Counters notions of memory that are purely psychological or purely constructed by social narrative. Instead argues that memory is embodied in social practice. Habit Memory is primarily expressed in actual body or physical movements of people and in ritual performance.
People create notions of themselves as they relate to their world and others in their society
These interactions are at the base of identity creation and maintenance.
Commemorative Ceremonies
Ritual
Ritual
Rule-governed activity of a symbolic character which draws the attention of its participants to objects of thought and feeling which they hold to be of special significance.
Defined by Steven Lukes and adhered to by Connerton
Ritual
1.
2.
3.
Any act or practice regularly repeated in a set precise manner for relief of anxiety
Merriam-Webster medical dictionary
Ritual (continued)
Rites
Formalized acts that tend to be stylized, stereotyped, and repetitive. They are not spontaneous and are deliberately observed to denote feelings. (Dictionary definition: A ceremonial act established by law or custom)
Christian Confirmation
Religion
Jesus
Abraham
Mosque
History=identity= continuity=commemoration
Passover Seder
Pilgrimage to Mecca
Bastille Day
Jubilee Day
Calendrical
Verbal
Hebrew Latin`
Sanskrit
Arabic
Gestural
Bodily Practices
Incorporating Practices
Information is taken from the action and interpreted based on various factors such as culture, religion or race. Living models help us learn these practices and the meaning is just understood but never directly discussed.
Inscribing Practices
Ways to provide information even after the informing system has stopped providing information. These must be taught in steps and explained in order to be understood but once they are understood they are with us forever. An example of this is learning the alphabet.
What type of practice do you think this is? When do we shake hands?
More signs. What do each of these mean ? how did you learn their meanings?
Lessons Learned
Words, images & bodily practices help us preserve the past. We are writing in an alphabet that is centuries old. We view artifacts that are centuries old. We are performing simple actions that have been done for centuries. Everything we do connects us to the past whether we realize it or not.