Handbook of Culture and Memory
Edited by Brady Wagoner
Reviews and Awards
"These expansive essays offer both richly detailed surveys of cutting edge research and productive new directions. Between biology and media theory, between psychology and history, this is the book to read on memory and culture." --John Sutton, Professor, Department of Cognitive Science, Macquarie University
"This volume is essential reading for anyone interested in the role of culture in human memory. Ranging across world history, cultural variations in contemporary societies, and human development from early childhood to old age, the authors have provided a treasure trove of information that is artfully woven together by this sure-handed editorial curation." --Michael Cole, Emeritus Distinguished Professor, Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego
"This volume makes more significant contributions than one can count, and will be a standard reference for those who wish to overcome the hard distinction between individualist and collectivist approaches to memory, which these essays accomplish through their commitment to a deep historical perspective." -- Jeffrey Keith Olick, Professor and Chair, Department of Sociology, University of Virginia
"In this urgently needed volume, Wagoner (Aalborg Univ., Denmark) and an international team of expert contributors examine the mutual constitution of cultural contexts and individuals' memories. Moving beyond fixed operationalizations of culture and memory, the volume explores the continuous, complex process of construction and reconstruction of remembering through cultural mediators. Guided by four principles of remembering as constructive, intersubjective, contextual, and occurring with and throughout diverse media, the chapters span the evolutionary origins of memory to collective remembering...The volume is indispensable reading for anyone interested in the dynamic relationship between culture and memory." --CHOICE