152 Theorizing Transnational Memory

A Tool for Fostering Resilience? New Challenges in Memory Studies
Saturday, April 16, 2016: 9:00 AM-10:45 AM
Rhapsody (DoubleTree by Hilton Philadelphia Center City)
Citizens, policy makers and academics have long struggled with how to deal publicly with experiences of human rights violations, dictatorships and totalitarianism. During the two consecutive remembrance years 2014 and 2015, the active promotion of reconciliation and commemorative policies has become regarded as a tool that can foster resilience in times of crisis, especially in Europe. Educators and politicians have therefore paid increasing attention to Memory Studies – a field that has until recently been relatively specialized and thus lacks a clear set of definitions, theoretical frameworks, and methodologies.

The inherent interdisciplinarity of the field has led to a wealth of different approaches, methods and techniques that we will map and build upon in two panels organized for the next Conference of Europeanists taking place in Philadelphia, April 14-16, 2016. After a successful launch of the Research Network on Transnational Memory and Identity in Paris in 2015, we now seek to undertake some groundwork, in order to make more rigorous and cumulative memory research possible.

This particular panel attempts to break new ground in theorising transnational memory.

Chair:
Aline Sierp
Discussant :
Jeffrey Olick
Coming to Terms with Dark Pasts?
Jennifer Dixon, Villanova University
The Future in and for Memory Studies
Daniel Levy, Stony Brook University