Constructions and (attempted) deconstructions of 'memory nationalism': Central European lessons
Autor: | Christian Karner |
---|---|
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Cultural Studies
Hegemony Sociology and Political Science L241 European Union Politics media_common.quotation_subject L380 Political Sociology 05 social sciences Dialogical self Morality Reification (Marxism) 050601 international relations 0506 political science Nationalism Exhibition Scholarship Aesthetics L214 Nationalism Political Science and International Relations 050602 political science & public administration Sociology Ideology media_common |
Popis: | Re-appropriating J.L. Austin’s “speech act theory” for memory studies, this article proposes that “memory acts” describe the work performed by ideologically disparate evocations of different pasts for the purposes of “doing things with cultural memories” in the present. This is used to re-think Avishai Margalit’s distinction between an “ethics-” and a “morality of memory”: through nationalist/ ethnic memory acts the “communities of memory” presupposed by Margalit are constructed; conversely, transnational memory acts are discursive/ symbolic means, through which a dialogical, inter-ethnic morality of memory becomes possible. This is briefly contextualized vis-a-vis seminal scholarship on the nationalist reification of ethno-linguistic boundaries since the late nineteenth century across Habsburg Central Europe and on the limits of this hegemonic “memory nationalism”. The discussion focuses on examples of transnational memory acts evident in Austria since the 1980s and, more narrowly, today. Those include cross-border initiatives, a street magazine, and museum exhibitions dedicated to re-remembering localities and regions outside of the “nation-state container”. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |