Main content

The politics of regret : on collective memory and historical responsibility

Available Formats:

Details:

  • Date:
    Issued
    2014
    Summary:

    Olick looks at how catastrophic, terrible pasts, Nazi Germany, apartheid South Africa, are remembered, but he is particularly concerned with the role that memory plays in social structures. Memory can foster any number of things, social solidarity, nostalgia, civil war, but it always depends on both the nature of the past and the cultures doing the remembering.

    Contents:
    • 1. Introduction : from collective memory to the politics of regret
    • 2. Collective memory : the two cultures
    • 3. Collective memory and cultural constraint : Holocaust myth and rationality in German politics
    • 4. Genre memories and memory genres : a dialogical analysis of May 8, 1945, commemorations in the Federal Republic of Germany
    • 5. Figurations of memory : a process-relational methodology, illustrated on the German case 6. politics of regret : analytical frames
    • 7. value of regret? : lessons from and for Germany
    • 8. From theodicy to Ressentiment : trauma and the ages of compensation
    • 9. Collective memory and chronic differentiation : historicity and the public sphere.
    Original Publisher: New York : Routledge, 2007
    Language(s): English