Part I. In Mind, Culture and History: A Special Perspective: 1. What are memories for? Functions of recall in cognition and culture Pascal Boyer; Part II. How Do Memories Construct Our Past?: 2. Networks of autobiographical memories Helen L. Williams and Martin A. Conway; 3. Cultural life scripts and individual life stories Dorthe Berntsen and Annette Bohn; 4. Specificity of memory: implications for individual and collective remembering Daniel L. Schacter, Angela H. Gutchess, and Elizabeth A. Kensinger; Part III. How Do We Build Shared Collective Memories?: 5. Collective memory James V. Wertsch; 6. The role of repeated retrieval in shaping collective memory Henry L. Roediger III, Franklin M. Zaromb, and Andrew C. Butler; 7. Making history: social and psychological processes underlying collective memory James W. Pennebaker and Amy Gonzales; 8. How does collective memory create a sense of the collective? Alan Lambert, Laura Nesse, Chad Rogers, and Larry Jacoby; Part IV. How Does Memory Shape History?: 9. Historical memories Craig W. Blatz and Michael Ross; 10. The memory boom: why and why now? David W. Blight; 11. Historians and sites of memory Jay Winter; Part V. How Does Memory Shape Culture?: 12. Oral traditions as collective memories: implications for a general theory of individual and collective memory David C. Rubin; 13. Cognitive predispositions and cultural transmission Pascal Boyer.
Provides answers about human memory and its role in making us who we are and societies who they are.
Pascal Boyer studied philosophy and anthropology at the Universities of Paris and Cambridge, where he did his graduate work with Professor Jack Goody, on memory constraints on the transmission of oral literature. He has done anthropological fieldwork in Cameroon on the transmission of the Fang oral epics and on Fang traditional religion. Since then he has worked mostly on the experimental study of cognitive capacities underlying cultural transmission. After teaching in Cambridge, San Diego, Lyon, and Santa Barbara, Boyer moved to his present position at the departments of anthropology and psychology at Washington University, St. Louis. James V. Wertsch is Professor in Arts and Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. After finishing his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago in 1975, Wertsch was a postdoctoral Fellow in Moscow at the USSR Academy of Sciences and Moscow State University. His research is concerned with language, thought, and culture, with a special focus on collective memory and national identity. Wertsch is the author of more than 200 publications appearing in a dozen languages. These include the volumes Voices of the Mind (1991), Mind as Action (1998), and Voices of Collective Remembering (2002).
“Memory isn't just for psychologists, or neuroscientists, anymore.
Psychologists learned a lot about memory in the 100 years after
Ebbinghaus. Then cognitive neuropsychology and cognitive
neuroscience began to connect the psychology of memory "down" to
its neural substrates. The remaining task is to connect the
psychology of memory "up" to the other social sciences, viewing
individual memory processes, and individual memories, in the
context of social and cultural structures and processes lying
outside the individual. Boyer and Wertsch have done just that. In
this book, their authors summarize what we already know, and
initiate a new line of research that will – it is to be hoped –
remind psychologists that they are social as well as biological
scientists, and foster the development of a cognitive perspective
within the social sciences more generally.”
—John F. Kihlstrom, University of California, Berkeley
“Having studied memory all my life I thought that I knew something
about it. This outstanding collection of essays by some of the most
eminent pacesetters in the emerging field of "memory studies"
forcefully reminded me that there is more to memory than what one
can find in the minds and brains of individuals. We are witnessing
the maturation of the young field of "memory studies," and this
volume provides us with a ringside seat.”
—Endel Tulving, University of Toronto
“Boyer and Wertsch present a much needed edited volume combining
the most recent results of memory studies in cognitive psychology
with studies in history and anthropology. The basic argument, that
we need to pay attention to how memories are formed before we can
discuss what they mean, is compelling. The contributors to this
volume cogently discuss the impact of repeated retrieval and
feedback patterns, as well as encoding and priming processes, and
link them to specific instances of individual and social
remembering, drawing examples from autobiographies, small-scale
oral societies, as well as nation-states. This book provides a
solid foundation for informed, interdisciplinary discussions on
memory.”
—Lucia Volk, San Francisco State University
"...Offering an important look at the extensive body of data on
memory, this impressive compilation of research findings offers a
much-needed synthesis of current and historical perspectives on
memory processes... The merge of behavioral and neuro-imaging
research offers an intriguing perspective on fundamental questions
related to memory. Because each study approaches the question of
culture and memory from a unique perspective, one finds new
insights at every turn... More than a melange of research findings,
this is one of the most thought-provoking discussions of memory
this reviewer has encountered in a long time... Essential..."
– T. A. Brown, Savannah College Art and Design, Choice
"There are many books on memory, most of them on the experimental
and clinical aspects or episodic, instrumental and semantic memory,
but this edited volume reflects the surge of interest in
autobiographical memory (AM) and in the collective memories of
cultures.... it makes somewhat interesting general reading.... It
will be enjoyed by skeptics and anti-establishment activists."
– Andrew Kertesz, London, Ontario, Canada, The Canadian Journal of
Neurological Sciences
"....this book provides excellent reviews of up-to-date memory
research in psychology-from brain structures to blogs-and also
innovatively connects this research to larger questions about human
culture.... the coverage of eminent cognitive psychologists is
admirable.... the book advances the field in important ways,
pointing the way to new research and theories. While it might be
especially useful for graduate students in cognitive, cultural, or
interdisciplinary psychology, this volume would grace the
bookshelves of anyone interested in how human minds and cultures
interact with one another."
--Emma E. Buchtel, Hong Kong Institute of Education, Canadian
Psychology/Psychologie Canadienne
"....This volume contains a fascinating collection of essays on
individual and collective memory, mostly from the field of
psychology, and raises the prospect of fruitful conversations on
the processes of memory formation between cognitive psychologists
and neurologists on the one hand and anthropologists and historians
on the other.... the structure of the book itself creates the
framework for a coherent narrative and a cumulative argument....
well written, and accessible, and the volume develops its arguments
in part because the essays are remarkably well integrated and build
on one another.... The volume is also fortunate to have included
contributions from two of the finest historians of memory, David W.
Blight and Jay S. Winter, authors of several memory studies of the
American Civil War and the First World War, respectively.... the
essays here are rich with potential insights for
historians...."
– William Van Arragon, The King's University College, Canadian
Journal of History
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