Paul Connerton

Paul Connerton is a British Social Anthropologist. He is best known for his work in memory studies.

Connerton's first book, How Societies Remember (1989), opened the discussion of collective memory (per Maurice Halbwachs and others) to include bodily gestures,[1] finding in clothing, manners, musical performance, and other socially negotiated practices locii where memory is "silted" (to use his verb) into human corporeal consciousness and praxis. Connerton followed up this work with How Modernity Forgets (2009), which emphasizes what Connerton calls "place memory," or memory that is dependent upon topography and particularly upon topography as it relates to the human body. Connerton argues that modernity is characterized by a particular sort of forgetting "associated with processes that separate social life from locality and from human dimensions: superhuman speed, megacities that are so enormous as to be unmemorable, comsumerism disconnected from the labour process, the short lifespan of urban architecture, the disappearance of walkable cities."[2]

References

  1. Fulkerson, Mary. Places of Redemption: Theology for a Worldly Church. Religion Dispatches. May 5, 2008.
  2. Connerton, Paul. How Modernity Forgets. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2009. 4-5.


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