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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

196347

Cultural memory

Astrid Erll

pp. 238-242

Abstract

Cultural memory is a theoretical perspective which links English and American Studies closely to interdisciplinary research in the humanities and social sciences. Memory studies is a broad convergence field, with contributions from cultural history, social psychology, media studies, political philosophy, and comparative literature. With the term "cultural memory," scholars describe all those processes of a biological, medial, or social nature which relate past and present (and future) in socio-cultural contexts. Cultural memory entails remembering and forgetting. It has an individual and a collective side, which are, however, closely interrelated (see Erll, Memory in Culture).

Publication details

Published in:

Middeke Martin, Müller Timo, Wald Christina, Zapf Hubert (2012) English and American studies: theory and practice. Stuttgart, Metzler.

Pages: 238-242

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-476-00406-2_15

Full citation:

Erll Astrid (2012) „Cultural memory“, In: M. Middeke, T. Müller, C. Wald & H. Zapf (eds.), English and American studies, Stuttgart, Metzler, 238–242.