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[ecrea] CFP / "When memories take a stand: cultural memory and mediations" - IC Journal
Fri Jan 26 22:31:10 GMT 2018
*When memories take a stand: cultural memory and mediations*
edited by Miguel Vázquez Liñán ((mvazquez /at/ us.es)) and Rubén Díaz
((rdialop /at/ acu.upo.es))
Deadline for proposals 15/05/2018
IC Scientific Journal of Information and Communication
(http://ic-journal.org/)
All submissions should be made via IC´s OJS platform at:
http://www.icjournal-ojs.org/
For more information, please contact David Montero ((davidmontero /at/ us.es))
or Rubén Díaz ((rdialop /at/ acu.upo.es))
_Description_
Semioticians at Tartu School Juri Lotman and Boris Uspensky defined
culture as the non-hereditary memory of the community, namely, a memory
that is not contained within genes, but within a symbolic system made
out of prescriptions and contradictions, restrictions and conflict. This
is what Aleida Assmann, among others, has called cultural memory. This
memory is disputed through social practices that we can referred to as
mediations: processes of cultural circulation that occur between the
institutionalized productions of meaning and the appropriations
resulting from the use that the commons make of it.
If political uses of memory tend to select, stabilize and, ultimately,
neutralize the past in an intentional and biased way (a common past that
must be preserved and commemorated; a past to be proud of and to take to
one’s heart), the memories that take a stand (Didi-Huberman, 2008) are
set into motion and evolve from the impact of repressed affects (Freud,
Benjamin, Warburg), unveiling “a past that is still alive, plural and
off beat; activating it in order to destabilize a certain autism of the
present” (Martín Barbero, 2011). When the rediscovery of the trauma and
the coming into being of the awareness about the historic wounds (which
is to say of the shift from a narrative of the winner to a narrative of
the scars, from the place of heroism to the place of the victim’s
suffering) do not find their recognition in the institutional figures,
icons and symbols (whether it is due to censorship, lack of political
interest or ignorance), they end up resulting in the suppuration of
those wounds, which eventually find visibility in the popular culture
that’s reproduced through mass means or through mass means which are
circumscribed to the popular (for we mustn’t forget that such mediations
are subjected to a two-way movement).
Where political uses of memory take sides and defend a common memory (a
single memory, cliché-memory, derived from “common sense” and closed,
inasmuch as it represents the authorized and canonical version of it),
the memories that take a stand survive disseminated and are built
through interconnections, through share points which are nevertheless
unique, as an infinite amalgamation of monuments, signs, untraceable
tracks, victories and defeats (Delgado, 2008). The power of these
memories is not what they have become, but rather what they are to
become. These memories do not ambition power, though they challenge
power through the distortion of the temporal order fixed by the politics
of memory and its institutional derivations.
Memory has today become a controversial and contradictory realm, not so
much threaten by suppression or censorship but by the overabundance of
information (Todorov), as well as by the so-called “empire of the
instantaneous” (Reyes Mate), to which a narrative industry –turned
factory of the present that rapidly loses its consciousness of the past–
is constantly subdued. In an age marked by generalized amnesia and by a
lack of historical consciousness, this feeling of rupture between past
and present finds a counter-point in the nostalgic enthusiasm towards an
over-represented past in the so-called “commemoration era”: the
proliferation of memorial museums and of cities as museums, the
touristification of memory places, the fascination towards retro and
vintage design, the renewed appreciation of flea markets, the rise of
historical novels and TV series. While media policies about memory help
articulate a “common memory”, which is usually the representation of the
national memory, subjected to chauvinistic appropriation,
commercialization and fetishism, we cannot ignore that the past is
always up for debate. Memories do not belong to a single time. They
imply a confrontation sometimes dormant, a tense coexistence of
disparate times. Thus, we better think of memory as a palimpsest and a
collage, not as a linear narrative.
As harvesters who bend down to collect what’s left after the crop of
memory, in this issue of the IC Journal we invite researchers to explore
the ways in which a community relates to its past through mediations
taking place, often suddenly and unexpectedly, through all sorts of
social mechanisms (both material and immaterial) that belong to the
realm of social imaginaries and perform a symbolic role within processes
of remembrance.
Contributions focusing on how memory can take a stand or on the ways in
which mediated discourses on the pasts (including the mechanisms these
mediations use, or their sociopolitical effects) will be particularly
welcome. Therefore, we are looking for original papers that can
contribute to a deeper understanding of the intersections between memory
studies, and culture industry and media studies.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to the following:
* The relationship between history, memory and mediation
* Memory discourse, war, peace and human rights
* Official memories and counter-hegemonic memories (the memory of the
labor movement, memorialists’ proposals from different social
movements, or the memory of the Revolution)
* Memory policies and communication and media regulations
(communication policies of the past), as they both are the framework
in which the dialogue about memory will be addressed. We would like
to put the accent on the need to reorganize culture industries, as
well as the communication policies that may help in this respect,
thus broadening the possibilities of minority memory discourses of
accessing mainstream communication channels
* Memories, symbols and mediations: flags and emblems, maps and
cartography, biographical texts about heroes, monuments and ruins,
text-books, travel guides, graffiti, film, dark tourism, plazas,
marginal suburbs, music, rites and commemorative celebrations,
comic, photography, contemporary art, science-fiction and digital
practice, popular religion, superstition, ghosts and its regression
* Memory, trauma and commemoration: how to narrate the traumas of the
past
*Book reviews*
IC Journal is now considering proposals for book reviews to be published
at the “Bibliografica” section. Reviewers might send their proposals at
e mail address “(info /at/ ic-journal.org)” or to Belén Zurbano
((bzurbano /at/ us.es)) as coordinator of this section.
*References*
Assmann, A. (2011). Cultural Memory and Western Civilization: Functions,
Media, Archives. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Delgado, M. (2008). Lo común y lo colectivo. El espacio público como
espacio de y para la comunicación. Madrid: Medialab Prado. Disponible en
http://medialab-prado.es/mmedia/0/688/688.pdf
Didi-Huberman, G. (2008) Cuando las imágenes toman posición. Madrid:
Antonio Machado
Lotman, Y. y Uspensky, B. (1978). “On the semiotic mechanism of
culture”. En New Literary History 9(2): 211–232. Disponible en
http://faculty.georgetown.edu/irvinem/theory/Lotman-SemioticMechanism-1978.pdf
Martín-Barbero, J. (2011). El país que no cabe en el museo de doña
Beatriz. Recuperado de:
http://www.revistaarcadia.com/impresa/articulo/el-pais-no-cabe-museo-dona-beatriz/25905
Mate, R. (2013). La piedra desechada. Madrid: Trotta.
Todorov, T. (2013). Los abusos de la memoria, Barcelona: Paidós.
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