'We tried to become normal': Social class and memory in oral histories with Montreal Holocaust survivors [0.03%]
《我们试图变得普通》:蒙特利尔大屠杀幸存者的口述史中的社会阶层与记忆
Anna Sheftel
Anna Sheftel
This article argues for social class and socioeconomic inequality as neglected forms of analysis when studying the memories and narratives of Holocaust survivors. Based primarily in oral histories conducted with Holocaust survivors in Montr...
Authenticity, absence, and pedagogy on a historical injustice bus tour [0.03%]
历史不公_bus旅游中的真实性、缺席和教学法
James Miles
James Miles
This article explores how memory practices at sites of historical injustice are shaped by authenticity and absence. It explores a case study of a weeklong bus tour which visited over 15 historic sites dedicated to memorializing the internme...
Clarifying dissenting voices: Exploring the ambivalence around the Canadian national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls [0.03%]
厘清异议之声:探究加拿大土著女性失踪及遇害问题国家调查的复杂性
Audrey Rousseau
Audrey Rousseau
From the outset, the Canadian National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (NIMMIWG, 2016-2019), whose mandate was to investigate and report on the systemic causes of all forms of violence against Indigenous women a...
Samuel Merrill,Ann Rigney
Samuel Merrill
This editorial introduces the 12 articles collected in this special issue on Remembering Activism: Explorations in the memory-activism nexus. It frames the articles within current debates in the field of memory studies and social movement s...
My body my choice: The hostile appropriation of feminist cultural memory in American anti-vaccine movements [0.03%]
我的身体我做主:美国反疫苗运动中对女权主义文化记忆的敌意性挪用
Tashina Blom
Tashina Blom
This article discusses how the reproductive rights slogan 'my body my choice' - which functions as a carrier of feminist cultural memory - was weaponised when it gained traction in anti-vaccine movements that appropriated it. During the glo...
Commodification anxiety and the memory of Turkish revolutionary Deniz Gezmiş [0.03%]
商品化焦虑以及对土耳其革命家Deniz Gezmiş的记忆
Duygu Erbil
Duygu Erbil
This article examines the impact of commodification on the memory-activism nexus in relation to the cultural afterlife of Deniz Gezmiş. It reframes discussions of the 'commodification' of the revolutionary in terms of 'celebrification' and...
Solidarity: Memory work, periodicals and the protest lexicon in the long 1960s [0.03%]
团结:大十年期记忆工作、期刊与抗议语汇(1960年代)
Sophie van den Elzen
Sophie van den Elzen
This article examines the lexical memory work performed by the British New Left as it differentiated itself from the organised labour movement post-1956. It argues that activists use memory to reframe the meaning of keywords in the 'protest...
Remembering the victims of COVID-19: From personal to civic to reparative memory [0.03%]
从个人到市民再到修复的记忆:纪念新冠肺炎死者
James E Young
James E Young
In March 2020, the Covid-19 pandemic had exploded in New York City, across the country, and around the world. At its height, thousands of people were dying every day in quarantined intensive care units and Covid wards, their families forbid...
Near and far: Tracing memory and reframing presence in pandemic-era Argentina [0.03%]
近与远:疫情下的阿根廷社会记忆及其在场感重建
Natasha Zaretsky
Natasha Zaretsky
Memory has been a central foundation of democracy and civil society in Argentina since the first years of the military dictatorship (1976-1983) when groups occupied public spaces to protest systematic disappearances and state repression tha...
Queer collective memory during the time of COVID: Timelessness, isolation, and resilience in the United Kingdom [0.03%]
新冠疫情下的英国 LGBTQ 集体记忆:无时光隔离中的韧性
Molly Merryman,Moira Armstrong
Molly Merryman
Oral history collections both rely on and preserve community memories, and are of importance for understanding marginalized communities, particularly when they privilege minority voices. This article draws from original, video-based oral hi...