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
11 - The Weight of Memory and the Lightness of Oblivion: The Dead of the Spanish Civil War
- 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
The grave's a fine and private place
Andrew Marvell, “To His Coy Mistress”Death is the most powerful agent of forgetting. But it is not all-powerful. From time immemorial men have erected barriers against forgetting in death, so that clues suggesting remembrance of the dead are considered by specialists in prehistory and archaeology to be the surest indications of the presence of human culture. The rituals of worship of the dead with their pleas for intercession, sacrificial acts, and burial objects no doubt serve in many cases primarily to ensure that the dead person enjoys a smooth journey into the beyond. But gravestones always also serve as “monuments” warning the living not to forget their dead—and yet people often forget all too easily, for “life goes on.” (Weinrich, Lethe: The Art and Critique of Forgetting 24)
Thus begins Harald Weinrich's discussion of Dante's restoration of the memory of the dead in his book on forgetting. In this paragraph, Weinrich establishes three basic points that bear on the subject of historical memory. First, the link between memory and the human condition, which comes down, in essence, to the evidence that to be human is to fight not against death (which is a survival strategy common to all living creatures) but against extinction, which only humans are capable of comprehending. To struggle against extinction involves resisting obliteration after the catastrophe of death has taken place. And this is of course what the Dantean characters do in the beyond, when they entreat the Christian poet to remember their stories. Short of undoing death, the poet may hold back their disappearance at the cost of immortalizing their suffering. Thus, they meet their punishment in their own desire to become images of horror for all eternity.
The second point is that the rituals of burial (and, we should add, of mourning) are meant to ensure the smooth departure of the dead; in other words, to sever their emotional entanglement with the living and to secure their status as images in memory. And the third point is the role that certain public acts of memory fulfill in the body politic, warning the living not to forget, or vice versa, stimulating oblivion so that life, a certain quality of life, “can go on.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Ghost in the ConstitutionHistorical Memory and Denial in Spanish Society, pp. 168 - 183Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017