100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Class notes

Memory Politics and Peacebuilding

Rating
4.0
(1)
Sold
1
Pages
54
Uploaded on
25-05-2025
Written in
2024/2025

All class notes & presentations for Memory Politics and Peacebuilding

Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
May 25, 2025
File latest updated on
June 3, 2025
Number of pages
54
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
David mwambari
Contains
All classes

Subjects

Content preview

Memory Politics and Peacebuilding
Les 1: Introduction
Why is the study of memory important, and how do we understand it?
- Michael Rothberg paraphrases Richard Terdiman’s definition of memory as
“the past made present”.
o Memory is a contemporary phenomenon, something that, while
concerned with the past, happens in the present; and second, that
memory is a form of work, working through, labour, or action.
- Memory studies can be interdisciplinary.
o Sociology, psychology, literature studies, anthropology, history
- Scholars agree memory is dynamic, ever changing and shaped by various
agents of memory
- It interplays between individual and collective processes, collectively
constructed. (Halbwachs)
- Dissenting narratives
o Dissenting = disagreeing or pushing back against commonly
accepted ideas
o EG whiteness created / constructed as normal in the US through
colonization
- Active agents of memory include
o Culture, institutions, media, literature, rituals, monuments,
narratives, art
o Narrators: creators of memory

Disciplinary perspective on memory
- Different methodologies per discipline
o Psychology
 Focus on individual memory, especially trauma
 Uses brain studies to see how trauma affects memory storage
 Clinical interventions (eg trauma sessions) show intensity of
processing
o Sociology; collective level
 Family = key link between personal and collective memory
 Family memory can support or challenge public
narratives
 Shows unified vs divergent narratives within families
 Gender shapes how memory is told and preserved
o Political Science;
 Studies how states build and control official memory
 Focus on power, national identity, and post-conflict memory
 Political actors select what is remembered or forgotten
 Looks at cross-border effects in memory politics
o Anthropology; Different methodological approaches
- Memory studies are inherently interdisciplinary
- While commemorations have always been part of societies, memory
studies emerged in the 20th century

Memory of Trauma (Short Summary):
- Trauma memories vary across groups, with gendered differences (e.g.,
Congo conflict: women emphasize rape, men focus on escape).

, - History focuses on official accounts; memory studies emphasize family and
community memories, often contested.
- Colonial thinkers: Archives are politicized and selective, challenging the
validity of official histories
Politics of memory
- Powerful institutions shape memory through museums, literature, images,
commemoration rituals, artefacts
- Silencing memories is very important (Eg collaborators)
- Forgetting is also very important (Collaborators etc.)
- Memory is an individual perception, always shaped through social
structures
- More often studying arts; studying musicians etc.

Construction of history
- History is constructed. It’s not just what happened but also what is said to
have happened, and what is left unsaid (Trouillot)
- Narrative control lies with key memory agents; silences reveal power
dynamics
- Testimonies offer personal perspectives but are often filtered by power
- Temporalities of memory highlight how cultures experience time
differently: dominant linear views can hinder reconciliation
- Contested memories influence present conflicts (eg Israel-Palestine),
showing how past and present are deeply intertwined
- Appeals to the past are among the most common strategies in
interpretations of the present.

Academic Concepts & Knowledge Production
- Memory is actively constructed by institutions, reflecting power dynamics
and serving present interests.
- Academic concepts (like collective memory) help understanding but can
oversimplify, be Eurocentric, and politically co-opted.
o Critical use of concepts is needed; they’re not the only knowledge
forms.
o Non-Western memory often transmits through poetry, rituals, music,
and folklore, highlighting the limits of Western frameworks.
- Memory carries, especially migrants, transmit memory across borders, with
gendered differences in focus.

Core Theoretical Frameworks

Cultural Memory Theory
- Focuses on how societies remember through structured, collective
processes
- Memory is maintained across generations via:
o Institutionalized memory practices (eg museums, education
systems)
o Cultural symbols and traditions (eg flags, holidays, rituals)
o Formalized commemoration rituals (eg national ceremonies,
anniversaries)
o Transmission mechanisms within cultural institutions (eg media,
religious institutions)
- Emphasizes how historical consciousness is socially constructed and
preserved

,Post-Memory theory (Marianne Hirsch)
- Focuses on the next generation’s relationship to traumatic pasts
(intergenerational)
- Key elements:
o Children of trauma survivors inherit memories they didn’t directly
experience
o These inherited memories shape their identity and emotional
understanding
o Family narratives and stories act as the main vehicle for transmitting
trauma
o Post-memory influences how later generations engage with history
and politics, even if they didn’t live through the events
- Explains the emotional and political legacy of events like genocide, war, or
displacement

Agents of Memory – Bin Laden Letter Case
- Social Media as Memory Agents
o Viral spread of bin Laden’s 2002 Letter to America (40M+ views)
shows how platforms reshape historical narratives.
o Marks a shift from institutional control to grassroots memory
formation.
- Presentism in Memory
o Letter went viral during the 2023 Gaza conflict, showing how present
events reframe past narratives for political purposes.
- Institutional Response
o U.S. government and platforms (e.g., TikTok) intervened to preserve
traditional narratives and suppress reinterpretation.
o Reveals tension between top-down control and bottom-up memory
formation
- Generational Memory Gap
o Young users engage with history primarily through social media with
a present-day lens, diverging from older collective understandings of
9/11.
- Blurring of Vernacular & Official Memory
o Individual posts triggered a mass memory event, forcing institutions
to respond—highlighting tensions between bottom-up and top-down
memory.
- Theoretical Implications
o Demonstrates the complex interplay between memory, media, and
political dynamics in the digital age.
o Highlights social media as an active agent in constructing and
contesting memory.

Cultural Expression as Memory Vehicle – Short Summary
- Music (e.g. Nina Simone, Bob Marley) transforms personal trauma into
collective memory.
- Songs/art document and preserve vernacular memory and resist dominant
historical narratives.
- Artistic works resurface in new historical contexts with renewed meaning.
- Reggae and protest music embody anti-colonial and resistance memory.

Memory Processes: Different types of Forgetting
Paul Connerton’s theoretical framework on different types of forgetting

, - Emphasized that forgetting is not merely a passive process but often an
active and strategic one. Several forms:
o Deliberate forgetting:
 Strategic erasure of certain historical events from official
narratives
 Institutional processes of selective remembrance
 Political decisions about which aspects of history to
emphasize or suppress
o Structural forgetting
 Systematic exclusion of certain perspectives from historical
narratives
 Unintentional loss of historical memory through generational
change
o Therapeutic forgetting
 Collective/societal decision of deemphasizing certain
historical aspects, to move beyond traumatic event.




Memory as Active Labour
- Institutional:
o Archives, education systems, and official commemorations work to
preserve and transmit dominant narratives.
- Community:
o Grassroots and local efforts maintain alternative histories, resist
official versions, and pass memory intergenerationally.
- Individual:
o Personal efforts to maintain and transmit family histories
o People actively engage with collective memory, navigating between
institutional and vernacular narratives.
$12.44
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
marktichemmt
3.5
(2)

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all reviews
6 months ago

4.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
marktichemmt KU Leuven
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
4
Member since
5 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
8
Last sold
6 months ago

3.5

2 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
1
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions