Communicating Memory & History takes as its mission the job of giving communication history its full due in the study of memory. Taking three keywords-communication, history, and memory-representing related, albeit at times hostile, fields of inquiry as its point of departure, this book asks how the interdisciplinary field of memory studies can be productively expanded through the work of communication historians. Across the chapters of this book, contributors employ methods ranging from textual analysis to reception studies to prompt larger questions about how the past can be alternately…mehr
Communicating Memory & History takes as its mission the job of giving communication history its full due in the study of memory. Taking three keywords-communication, history, and memory-representing related, albeit at times hostile, fields of inquiry as its point of departure, this book asks how the interdisciplinary field of memory studies can be productively expanded through the work of communication historians. Across the chapters of this book, contributors employ methods ranging from textual analysis to reception studies to prompt larger questions about how the past can be alternately understood, contested, and circulated.
Communicating Memory & History is ideal for teaching, including case studies that elaborate different ways to approach issues in memory studies. While some foundational knowledge would be useful, it is possible to use the text without extensive knowledge of the literature. This book is of particular interest to professors, graduate students, and advanced undergraduate students of communication and media studies, as well as scholars and students in cultural studies, history, and sociology-disciplines where one finds steady consideration of issues related to communication, communication history, and memory.
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Autorenporträt
Nicole Maurantonio received her PhD from the University of Pennsylvania and serves as Associate Professor of Rhetoric & Communication Studies and American Studies at the University of Richmond. She has previously published in Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Southern Communication Journal, The Communication Review, and Media History, among other journals. David W. Park received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania and serves as Professor of Communication at Lake Forest College. He has previously published The History of Media and Communication Research (with Jefferson Pooley), The Long History of New Media (with Nicholas W. Jankowski and Steve Jones), Pierre Bourdieu: A Critical Introduction to Media and Communication Theory, and The International History of Communication Study (with Peter Simonson).
Inhaltsangabe
List of Figures - Acknowledgments - Nicole Maurantonio/David W. Park: Introduction: Remembering Communication History - Section I: Communicating Space & Time - Emily Keightley/Michael Pickering/Pawas Bisht: Interscalarity and the Memory Spectrum - Piotr M. Szpunar: Archiving ISIS: Metastasized Archives, Lieux de Futur, and Endless War - Section II: Narrative - Deborah Lubken: Remarkable Coincidence: A True Story of the Liberty Bell's Myth - Michael Meyen: Mass Media as Memory Agents: A Theoretical and Empirical Contribution to Collective Memory Research - Oren Meyers: Mnemonic Newswork: Exploring the Role of Journalism in the Rereading of National Pasts - Section III: Embodiment & Materiality - Erin E. Cory: Badna Naaref (We Want to Know): The Politics of Movement and Memory in "Postwar" Beirut - Carolyn Kitch: "Taking Back" a Post-Conflict City: Tourism, Anniversary Memory, and the New Histories of Belfast - Samantha Oliver: Presence and Absence: The Berlin Wall as Strategic Platform - Sharon Ringel: Building an Archive for Future Generations: Archival Digitization at the National Library of Israel - Section IV: Audience - Amanda Lagerkvist/Katerina Linden: Digital Post-Scarcity Versus Default Amnesia: Russian Political Existence and the Online Resurrection of Memories of the Dead at the Nord-Ost Theatre Siege - Manuel Menke/Ekaterina Kalinina: Reclaiming Identity: GDR Lifeworld Memories in Digital Public Spheres - Barbie Zelizer: Postscript: Once A Margin, Always A Margin - Contributors - Index.
List of Figures - Acknowledgments - Nicole Maurantonio/David W. Park: Introduction: Remembering Communication History - Section I: Communicating Space & Time - Emily Keightley/Michael Pickering/Pawas Bisht: Interscalarity and the Memory Spectrum - Piotr M. Szpunar: Archiving ISIS: Metastasized Archives, Lieux de Futur, and Endless War - Section II: Narrative - Deborah Lubken: Remarkable Coincidence: A True Story of the Liberty Bell's Myth - Michael Meyen: Mass Media as Memory Agents: A Theoretical and Empirical Contribution to Collective Memory Research - Oren Meyers: Mnemonic Newswork: Exploring the Role of Journalism in the Rereading of National Pasts - Section III: Embodiment & Materiality - Erin E. Cory: Badna Naaref (We Want to Know): The Politics of Movement and Memory in "Postwar" Beirut - Carolyn Kitch: "Taking Back" a Post-Conflict City: Tourism, Anniversary Memory, and the New Histories of Belfast - Samantha Oliver: Presence and Absence: The Berlin Wall as Strategic Platform - Sharon Ringel: Building an Archive for Future Generations: Archival Digitization at the National Library of Israel - Section IV: Audience - Amanda Lagerkvist/Katerina Linden: Digital Post-Scarcity Versus Default Amnesia: Russian Political Existence and the Online Resurrection of Memories of the Dead at the Nord-Ost Theatre Siege - Manuel Menke/Ekaterina Kalinina: Reclaiming Identity: GDR Lifeworld Memories in Digital Public Spheres - Barbie Zelizer: Postscript: Once A Margin, Always A Margin - Contributors - Index.
Rezensionen
"This collection of essays is essential reading for those interested in communication, memory, and history. Bringing together an impressive list of international authors from all ranks of academic life, Communicating Memory & History provides fresh takes on issues related to time and space, narrative construction, materiality/embodiment, and audience reception. The editors convincingly argue that we need to become much better at uncovering the historical roots of our contemporary mediated social lives, since all social questions, deep at heart, are historical." -Julia Sonnevend, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Communications at the New School for Social Research
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