AltaMira Press
Pages: 252
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7591-0177-7 • Hardback • October 2002 • $138.00 • (£106.00)
978-0-7591-0178-4 • Paperback • October 2002 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
978-0-7591-1643-6 • eBook • October 2002 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
Climo is an anthropologist at Michigan State University. Cattell is a research associate in anthropology at The Field Museum, Chicago.
Part 1 Introduction: Meaning in Social Memory and History: Anthropological Perspectives
Part 2 Part I: Continuity in Memory, History, and Culture
Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Exploring Venues of Social Memory
Chapter 4 Chapter 2: It Wasn't a Woman's World: Memory Construction and the Culture of Control in a North of Ireland Parish
Chapter 5 Chapter 3: A Personal History of Memory
Chapter 6 Chapter 4: Remembering the Past, Re-Membering the Present: Elders' Constructions of Place and Self in a Philadelphia Neighborhood
Chapter 7 Chapter 5: The Cemetery: A Site for Construction of Memory, Identity, and Ethnicity
Chapter 8 Chapter 6: Memories of the American Jewish Aliyah: Connecting Individual and Collective Experience
Part 9 Part II Contested Memory and History
Chapter 10 Chapter 7: Kiowa: On Song and Memory
Chapter 11 Chapter 8: Symbolic Violence and Language: Mexico and Its Uses of Symbols
Part 12 Part III Reconciliation and Redress
Chapter 13 Chapter 9: Remembering and Forgetting: Creative Expression and Reconciliation in Post-Pinochet Chile
Chapter 14 Chapter 10: The Meshingomesia Indian Village Schoolhouse in Memory and History
Part 15 Bibliography
Part 16 Index
Part 17 About the Authors
Reviewing the connection between memory, history, and meaning, this volume is well researched, detailed, and thoughtful. It stresses the anthropological perspective that memory is dependent on culture and context. It is an excellent précis of how memory is constructed, how it works or does not work, and how individuals and different groups of people view it.
— Marjorie M. Schweitzer, Emerita, Oklahoma State University
Each one of the chapters in this collection is creditable, and yet overall there is an imperative to pull together the flourish of innovative work on social memory and history, both within and beyond anthropology.
— Cultural and Social History
The impressive breadth of material included in this volume reflects just how encompassing the concept of social or collective memory has become...The essays in Social Memory and History reflect both the strengths and potential pitfalls of current social memory research.
— Jason James, Lafayette College; The Public Historian
Climo and Cattell's collection of essays from a variety of fields address important issues related to understanding the construction of social memory. The contributing authors provide 10 case studies that demonstrate how memory transmits culture or contests it at the individual, community, and national levels. While the volume reaches across disciplines, it is also a major contribution to anthropology and it should be read by students and scholars interested in how history and anthropology can work together.
— Paul Shackel, (Professor and Director, University of Maryland Center for Heritage Resource Studies)