Cultural Memory in Translation: Revisiting Cultural Memory Through Interpretative Lens

Price range: $54.99 through $69.99

Description

Cultural Memory in Translation is theoretically grounded in foundational memory studies scholarship while advancing innovative interpretative frameworks that challenge traditional disciplinary boundaries. The volume draws primarily from three seminal theoretical traditions that have shaped the field: Maurice Halbwachs’ pioneering concept of collective memory, which argued that human memory can only function within collective contexts where social groups provide frameworks for remembrance (Halbwachs, 1992); Jan Assmann’s distinction between cultural memory—long-term societal memory spanning up to 3,000 years transmitted through external systems of notation—and communicative memory, typically restricted to 80-100 years (Assmann, 2011); and Pierre Nora’s influential concept of lieux de mémoire (sites of memory), which identified symbolic spaces, practices, and objects that preserve cultural memory when lived tradition has disappeared (Nora, 1989).

When combined, Cultural Memory in Translation’s theoretical synthesis and empirical scope makes translation a crucial framework for comprehending the circulation of transcultural memory. As a result, the book questions widely held beliefs about how memories move, change, and take on new meanings across cultural boundaries, providing academics and professionals with a wealth of resources for further study.

Bibliographic details: The bibliographic details of the book are available at https://dx.doi.org/10.46679/9789349926639