Time and Memory / / edited by Jo Alyson Parker, Paul André Harris, Michael Crawford.

The nature of time has haunted humankind through the ages. Some conception of time has always entered into our ideas about mortality and immortality, and permanence and change, so that concepts of time are of fundamental importance in the study of religion, philosophy, literature, history, and mytho...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:The Study of Time ; 12
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden; , Boston : : BRILL,, 2006.
Year of Publication:2006
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:The Study of Time ; 12.
Physical Description:1 online resource (339 p.)
Notes:"Selected essays from the 12th triennial conference of the International Society for the Study of Time at Clare College, Cambridge"--P. [4] of cover.
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Table of Contents:
  • CONTENTS
  • Dedication
  • List of Contributors
  • Foreword ( Michael Crawford, Jo Alyson Parker, Paul Harris )
  • President's Welcoming Remarks
  • A Few Th oughts about Memory, Collectiveness and Aff ectivity ( Remy Lestienne )
  • Founder's Address
  • Reflections Upon An Evolving Mirror ( J. T. Fraser )
  • Response: Globalized Humanity, Memory, and Ecology ( Paul Harris )
  • Section I: Inscribing and Forgetting
  • Preface to Section I
  • Inscribing and Forgetting ( Jo Alyson Parker )
  • Chapter One
  • The Body as a Medium of Memory ( Christian Steineck )
  • Response ( Remy Lestienne )
  • Chapter Two
  • Body Memories and Doing Gender: Remembering the Past and Interpreting the Present in Order to Change the Future ( Karen Davies )
  • Response ( Linda McKie )
  • Chapter Th ree
  • Coding of Temporal Order Information in Semantic Memory ( Elke van der Meer, Frank Kruger, Dirk Strauch, Lars Kuchinike )
  • Chapter Four
  • Telling the Time of Memory Loss: Narrative and Dementia ( Marlene P. Soulsby )
  • Response ( Alison Phinney )
  • Chapter Five
  • Georges Perec's "Time Bombs": about Lieux ( Marie-Pascale Huglo )
  • Chapter Six
  • Seeking in Sumatra ( Brian Aldiss )
  • Section II: Inventing
  • Preface to Section II
  • Inventing ( Paul Harris )
  • Chapter Seven
  • Furnishing a Memory Palace: Renaissance Mnemonic Practice and the Time of Memory ( Mary Schmelzer )
  • Chapter Eight
  • The Radiance of Truth: Remembrance, Self-Evidence and Cinema ( Heike Klippel )
  • Chapter Nine
  • Tones of Memory: Music and Time in the Prose of Yoel Hoff mann and W. G. Sebald ( Michal Ben-Horin )
  • Response ( David Burrows )
  • Chapter Ten
  • Once a Communist, Always a Communist: How the Government Lost Track of Time in its Pursuit of J. Robert Oppenheimer ( Katherine A. S. Sibley )
  • Response ( Dan Leab )
  • Chapter Eleven
  • Temporality, Intentionality, the Hard Problem of Consciousness and the Causal Mechanisms of Memory in the Brain: Facets of One Ontological Enigma? ( E. R. Douglas )
  • Section III: Commemoration
  • Preface to Section III
  • Commemoration-Where Remembering and Forgetting Meet ( Michael Crawford )
  • Chapter Twelve
  • Jump-starting Timeliness: Trauma, Temporality and the Redressive Community ( Jeffrey Prager )
  • Chapter Th irteen
  • Black in Black: Time, Memory, and the African-American Identity ( Ann Marie Bush )
  • Chapter Fourteen
  • Remembering Th e Future: On the Return of Memories in the Visual Field ( Efrat Biberman )
  • Responses ( Shirley Sharon-Zisser )
  • ( Robert Belton )
  • Chapter Fifteen
  • Family Memory, Gratitude And Social Bonds ( Carmen Leccardi )
  • Chapter Sixteen
  • Time to Meet: Meetings as Sites of Organizational Memory ( Dawna Ballard and Luis Felipe Gómez )
  • Index.