Deadline for the receipt of abstracts: 31 January 2014
The politics of remembering and forgetting are important social and cultural issues. The authority, power and resources with which to create hegemonic versions of the past – to give authoritative accounts that are available in the public domain – are largely the property of institutions. Questions of power, voice, representation and identity are central to Cultural and Collective Memory.
This interdisciplinary conference will address how hegemonic narratives of the past are reproduced or challenged. It will examine the role of Cultural and Collective Memory in shaping meanings, values and identities. Papers are encouraged to address the relationship between past and present in Cultural and Collective Memory and how this relates to social power relations.
Papers are welcome in areas such as:
· Cultural memory and the archive
· Curating memory
· Globalised memory
· Marginalised histories
· Memory and affect
· Memory and anti-colonial struggle
· Memory and class
· Memory as gender/sexual politics
· New technologies and memory
· Public history
· Racialised memory
· Religion and cultural memory
· Space, place and memory
· Theoretical approaches to cultural and collective memory