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Postnational Memory, Peace and War Nigel Young (Colgate University, USA)

Postnational Memory, Peace and War By Nigel Young (Colgate University, USA)

Postnational Memory, Peace and War by Nigel Young (Colgate University, USA)


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Postnational Memory, Peace and War Summary

Postnational Memory, Peace and War: Making Pasts Beyond Borders by Nigel Young (Colgate University, USA)

This book examines the phenomenon of modern memory as a reaction to total war, an aspiration to truth-seeking provoked by the independent forces of modern war and collective violence which is transnational, or postnational, in character. Using examples from prose and poetry, film and theatre, painting and photography, and music and the popular arts, the author traces a narrative path through the events of the twentieth century, defining the tradition of modern memory in terms of its essentially anti-militaristic, anti-war character, as expressed in the manner in which it represents recalled violence and atrocity. Through a series of thematic discussions of two world wars, the Shoah, urbicide and nuclear weapons, Postnational Memory explores the formation of transnational memory, drawing on examples from industrialized societies, with a focus on memory of real events and their reproduction in literature and the arts, often including personal recollections that link the self to the represented past. As such, by asking how the concept of modern memory is constructed through the victims of war and genocide, the book constitutes an alternative to national memories and hegemonic, militarist or ethnocentric histories. Surveying the emergence of new, transnational forms of remembering the past, it will appeal to students and scholars of sociology, memory studies and peace studies, as well as those working in disciplines such as modern and international history, cultural studies and military studies.

Postnational Memory, Peace and War Reviews

"Nigel Young's rich tapestry of words, images and reflections leads us to understand how the total wars of the 20th century have shaped and changed our modern sense of memory. He shows how the shattering experiences of two world wars - and of the genocides, annihilations, crimes against humanity and the first use of nuclear weapons which accompanied them - have been dealt with in different ways. Some memories have been suppressed, some have emerged from long silence, and many have been variously interpreted and re-interpreted over the decades. They have also generated powerful art (vividly illustrated here), journalism and literature. Memory has moved from the private to the public sphere, developing new transnational forms to challenge the orthodoxies of nationalism and hegemonism. This is a book which invites us to revisit both the past and the present with searching questions about the impact of war on modern human consciousness." - John Gittings, author of The Glorious Art of Peace: Paths to Peace in a New Age of War.

"Nigel Young's challenging and interesting book draws on his wisdom and deep experience. It's very much a work of personal witness, most notably in the book's numerous vignettes and examples. These explore not only war poetry, literature, museums, memorials, paintings, musical requiems and so forth; but also more popular arts, like wall murals, songs, journalism and popular theatre, novels and films." - Robin Luckham, University of Sussex, UK.

"Memory is now a specialised field of its own and the author has spent much of his career deeply engaged in it, especially as it relates to modern war, genocide and mass violence - including nuclear weapons. Drawing on a huge range of examples from prose, poetry, film and theatre, painting, photography, music and the popular arts, he traces a narrative path through the tragic events of the 20th century. In this way, Young sketches out a history of modern remembering and explores the formation of a 'transnational' (or 'postnational') historical awareness, as an alternative to purely national narratives and imperial, militarist or ethnocentric histories. He takes us to 'sacred' sites (Auschwitz, Hiroshima and many more) and intersperses the more theoretical passages with telling personal 'vignettes'. This remarkable work is intense and deeply felt; not always an easy read, but one that repays the effort." - Colin Archer, MAW (The Movement for the Abolition of War) newsletter

"Given its historical range and geographical scope, Nigel Young's project - which is to trace what he interprets as a modern, postnational 'collective memory' since around World War I - is a considerable achievement.

At one point, he refers to the notion of an 'invention of tradition' - such as that of creating national commemorative rituals and narratives. This idea, a concept first developed by Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger is an apt one for describing Young's own approach.

Postnational Memory draws from multiple sources, genres and exemplars from the arts, to depict, and then track a nascent tradition, evolving through more than a century. This cultural narrative reminded me of events and aspects of which I had been long aware, but mostly were at least half forgotten and were now re-united around this thesis.

I felt frustrated at times, while reading the book, that there is no single authoritative voice or conceptual scheme to organise everything neatly or tell the reader what s/he should think. However, I gradually started to feel the value and the benefits of the idea of being invited to join the creative process; to 'invent', detect or construct my own version, of these paths, or voices, of alternative experiencing and 'tradition-making'. The process of modern remembering thus represents a polyphony, a multiplicity of different voices, that prevents any imperialist or imperious domination by any single voice. Bakhtin would have been very happy with it!

Throughout the book, Young's own voice, and experiences - largely expressed in intermittent personal vignettes - covering decades of reflection and experience - contribute to making this an amazing and exhilarating read." - Tom Wengraf, former lecturer at Middlesex University and Research Fellow at Birkbeck College, UK

"It can be genuinely difficult to escape national confines when thinking about peace and war. Currently, for example a specifically British narrative of World War II is resurfacing in the apparently unrelated context of the Covid-19 pandemic. Yet even for the peace movement it can be hard to transcend national preoccupations when key reference points often relate to specific conflicts. Conscientious objection, Quaker service, CND, white poppies, peace demonstrations, and much else, take off from specific contestations in British history.

It is in this light that Nigel Young's Postnational Memory, Peace and War: Making Pasts Beyond Borders has a relevance beyond its range and cogency as an academic study. The book works its way towards an energizing message for the future - that we can create narratives of both mourning and hope beyond national borders and ancient enmities. But to accept Thomas Hardy's adage 'If a way to the Better there be, it exacts a full look at the Worst' is to grasp why Young feels the need to revisit, in a focused, unsensational way the main horrors of twentieth century's wars.

So, yes, the book does chronicle what lies behind those tragically iconic words: Somme, Guernica, Hiroshima, Vietnam, Bosnia and, above all, Holocaust or Shoah. Yet this tour of man's inhumanity to man does not simply depress, for two reasons. First, there is a very strong emphasis on the witnesses - combatants, civilians, writers, artists - who have not only borne witness to atrocity but also shown how the human spirit can affirm shared values beyond violence and destruction. From the First World War poets to the relative unsung creators of the Hiroshima panels to the epic films of Claude Lanzmann on the Shoah and Peter Watkins on nuclear destruction, there have been affirmations of a transnational mourning and hope.

A second reason that the book threads securely between apocalyptic gloom and voyeuristic tourism, is that it is studded with vignettes of personal experience, as the author revisits sites of memory and mourning. These stories often touch on the very specific and local (the influence of W G Sebald is acknowledged). One heartening anecdote retails the author's boyhood encounter with railway-labouring Italian POWs. Their warm welcome and sharing of a novel wartime treat - espresso coffee - touchingly exemplifies the author's theme of crossing borders.

Yet his personal odyssey necessarily involves far darker encounters as he visits Thiepval, Verdun, Birkenau and Hiroshima. Intent on avoiding 'atrocity tourism' or 'museumization' of these sites, he works his way beyond the official narratives that may present us with what he terms prosthetic memories - which, like the screen memories of Freud's patients, serve to obscure rather than illuminate the past. Always, he seeks out counter-narratives. Some are the testimonies of citizen witnesses, like local Buddhist responses to the Vietnam war, while others are the 'memory-work' of individual artists like Paul Nash or Otto Dix, determined to memorialize the stark reality of conflict.

From such witnessing Nigel Young finds a foundation for transnational remembering and for consequent shared action in the future. He faces up to contemporary problems in achieving this: on the one hand, a rise in nationalism and fundamentalism, on the other hand a social-media absorption in an eternal present. But again, he finds numerous heartening examples of those creating 'a global archive of the past in the present', reaching out beyond national, ethnic or religious barriers to create a 'Transnational Memory' through which both past suffering and future hopes can be shared." - K. E. Smith, The Friend

About Nigel Young (Colgate University, USA)

Nigel Young is Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Research Professor in Peace Studies at Colgate University, USA. He is the editor in chief of the Oxford International Encyclopedia of Peace and co-editor of Campaigns for Peace: The British Peace Movement in the 20th Century. He is the author of Nation State and War Resistance, On War, National Liberation and The State, and An Infantile Disorder? The Crisis and Decline of the New Left, and the co-author of Pacifism in the 20th Century.

Table of Contents

Part 1: Memory and Counter-Memory

Prologue

Vignette: Being There - A Cotswold Vignette (Adlestrop)

Introduction: Defining Modern Memory

Vignette: Kennington At Laventie

1. A Memorable Engagement -The War to End War - and its Legacy (inc. Vignette: 'Bradford Pals')

2. The Great Sunk Silences: The Nature of Forgetting and the Unbearable Pain of Recall

3. Memory's New Voice

4. Generations of Memory: War Booms and Memory Booms

5. Strange Meetings and Cosmopolitan Sympathies (inc. Vignette: Eugen Gehweiler, Vignette: 'An Espresso Moment')

Part 2: Against Forgetting - Retrieving a Borderless Past

6. Memory after the "Shoah" (inc. Vignette: Being There: Poland: 1988, 1996)

7. Airwar and Memory (inc. Vignette: A Silence, Vignette: 'Bambi'; 'Belsen and Memory of the Camps')

Part 3: Re-Writing Memory

8. Beyond Amnesia: Breaking Silences (inc. Vignette: Benicassim - Raising the Ghosts of Castillon De La Plana)

9. Testimony of Place (inc. Vignette: Walking the Fields of Memory: Germany 1994, France and Flanders (1988 and 1992))

10. Beyond Militarism? Peace and War in Civil Memory (inc. Vignette: Oh! What a Lovely War! Vignette: A Mass of Memoried Flowers - Poppies and Ploughboys)11. Postnational Memory and National Conflict: Remembrance in a Globalising Society

Part 4: Towards a History of Modern Memory

12. Towards a History of Modern Memory I: The Work of the Precursors

13. Towards a History of Modern Memory II: A Memory-Work Timeline

14. The Past in the Present- Metamorphosen (inc. Vignette: Yevgeny Khaldei - The Malleability of Memory and the Reichstag Photo, 1945)

Additional information

GOR013155376
9780367110970
0367110970
Postnational Memory, Peace and War: Making Pasts Beyond Borders by Nigel Young (Colgate University, USA)
Used - Well Read
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2019-12-11
364
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book. We do our best to provide good quality books for you to read, but there is no escaping the fact that it has been owned and read by someone else previously. Therefore it will show signs of wear and may be an ex library book

Customer Reviews - Postnational Memory, Peace and War