Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Historical Memory and the Limits of Retrospection
- 2 Why Memory? Reflections on a Politics of Mourning
- 3 Memory and Imputation
- 4 Denial and the Ethics of Memory
- 5 Warming Up for the War: The Cultural Transmission of Violence in Spain since the Early Twentieth Century
- 6 Guernica as a Sign of History
- 7 Delenda est Catalonia: The Unwelcome Memory
- 8 Allez, Allez! The 1939 Exodus from Catalonia and Internment in French Concentration Camps
- 9 The Corpse in One's Bed: Mercè Rodoreda and the Concentrationary Universe
- 10 Transatlantic Reversals: Exile and Anti-History
- 11 The Weight of Memory and the Lightness of Oblivion: The Dead of the Spanish Civil War
- 12 Between Testimony and Fiction: Jorge Semprún's Autobiographical Memory
- 13 It Wasn't This: Latency and Epiphenomenon of the Transition
- 14 Window of Opportunity: The Television Documentary as After-Image of the War
- 15 Anachronism and Latency in Spanish Democracy
- 16 Negationism and Freedom of Speech
- 17 Exhaustion of the Transition Pact: Revisionism and Symbolic Violence
- Bibliography
- Index
Historical Memory and the Limits of Retrospection
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Historical Memory and the Limits of Retrospection
- 2 Why Memory? Reflections on a Politics of Mourning
- 3 Memory and Imputation
- 4 Denial and the Ethics of Memory
- 5 Warming Up for the War: The Cultural Transmission of Violence in Spain since the Early Twentieth Century
- 6 Guernica as a Sign of History
- 7 Delenda est Catalonia: The Unwelcome Memory
- 8 Allez, Allez! The 1939 Exodus from Catalonia and Internment in French Concentration Camps
- 9 The Corpse in One's Bed: Mercè Rodoreda and the Concentrationary Universe
- 10 Transatlantic Reversals: Exile and Anti-History
- 11 The Weight of Memory and the Lightness of Oblivion: The Dead of the Spanish Civil War
- 12 Between Testimony and Fiction: Jorge Semprún's Autobiographical Memory
- 13 It Wasn't This: Latency and Epiphenomenon of the Transition
- 14 Window of Opportunity: The Television Documentary as After-Image of the War
- 15 Anachronism and Latency in Spanish Democracy
- 16 Negationism and Freedom of Speech
- 17 Exhaustion of the Transition Pact: Revisionism and Symbolic Violence
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Where remembrance coheres, there, also, is the blood-dimmed tide.
David Rieff, Against Remembrance, 128Intellectual activity, just as the life process, seems to be governed by the law of the pendulum. When satisfaction quiets the irritation of an organ, it establishes a state of organic apathy until a new irritant intervenes. A classic shibboleth affirms that the history of philosophy oscillates between Plato and Aristotle in a circadian rhythm measured not in hours but in centuries. After a half-century of dire warnings about the consequences of forgetting the past, skeptical and even contrarian discourses have emerged against the historical memory. Increasingly, people clamor against the excesses perpetrated in the name of memory by the identities that misuse it. An example of this reaction can be found in David Rieff's book, Against Remembrance. Written in the wake of the war in the Balkans, this essay popularized the more rigorous criticism of so-called memory studies pioneered by Charles Meier in the 1990s. Meier's intervention was opportune, considering the trivialization of the concept of historical memory and the race for victimhood status that accompanied the rise of memory studies. In the words of a guest speaker at Stanford, trauma affects everyone, since all of us have inherited some history or other. But if everyone inherits a history, or at least a story—and who doesn't?—surviving a genocidal experience or living under a murderous dictatorship ceases to be a requirement for admission to the club of the traumatized. If memory is inextricable from narcissism, a faculty in service to self-esteem, then mine is as good as anyone else's. And who can set limits to self-pity? Thus, it makes perfect sense to complain about the excesses of memory, although to do so by generalizing trauma inevitably trivializes it.
Beyond the exigencies of political correctness, it is important to weigh the consequences of the current memory surfeit to decide when the fatigue is motivated by legitimate concern with misuse and when by concealment of crimes and the hankering after impunity. We should not ask only, whom does memory serve? but also, who benefits from forgetting?
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- The Ghost in the ConstitutionHistorical Memory and Denial in Spanish Society, pp. 9 - 21Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017