Memory, History, Forgetting

Summary
Why do major historical events such as the Holocaust occupy the forefront of the collective consciousness, while profound moments such as the Armenian genocide, the McCarthy era, and France's role in North Africa stand distantly behind? Is it possible that history "overly remembers" some events at the expense of others? A landmark work in philosophy, Paul Ricoeur's Memory, History, Forgetting examines this reciprocal relationship between remembering and forgetting, showing how it affects both the perception of historical experience and the production of historical narrative.
Memory, History, Forgetting , like its title, is divided into three major sections. Ricoeur first takes a phenomenological approach to memory and mnemonical devices. The underlying question here is how a memory of present can be of something absent, the past. The second section addresses recent work by historians by reopening the question of the nature and truth of historical knowledge. Ricoeur explores whether historians, who can write a history of memory, can truly break with all dependence on memory, including memories that resist representation. The third and final section is a profound meditation on the necessity of forgetting as a condition for the possibility of remembering, and whether there can be something like happy forgetting in parallel to happy memory. Throughout the book there are careful and close readings of the texts of Aristotle and Plato, of Descartes and Kant, and of Halbwachs and Pierre Nora.
A momentous achievement in the career of one of the most significant philosophers of our age, Memory, History, Forgetting provides the crucial link between Ricoeur's Time and Narrative and Oneself as Another and his recent reflections on ethics and the problems of responsibility and representation.
“His success in revealing the internal relations between recalling and forgetting, and how this dynamic becomes problematic in light of events once present but now past, will inspire academic dialogue and response but also holds great appeal to educated general readers in search of both method for and insight from considering the ethical ramifications of modern events. . . . It is indeed a master work, not only in Ricoeur’s own vita but also in contemporary European philosophy.”— Library Journal
“Ricoeur writes the best kind of philosophy—critical, economical, and clear.”— New York Times Book Review
Similar Books
-
The Theory of Need in Marx
by Ágnes Heller
-
Bodies, Masses, Power: Spinoza and His Contemporaries
by Warren Montag
-
-
Visions of the Sociological Tradition
by Donald Nathan Levine
-
-
-
Desire for Origins: New Language, Old English, and Teaching the Tradition
by Allen J. Frantzen
-
Desire for Origins: New Languages, Old English, and Teaching and Tradition
by Allen J. Frantzen
-
Enemies of Hope: A Critique of Contemporary Pessimism
by Raymond Tallis
-
Corporal Compassion: Animal Ethics and Philosophy of Body
by Ralph R. Acampora
-
Social Evolutionism: A Critical History
by Stephen K. Sanderson
-
In the Eyes of God: A Study on the Culture of Suffering
by Fernando Escalante Gonzalbo
-
-
Makers of Modern Culture: Five Twentieth-Century Thinkers
by Roland N. Stromberg
-
-
-
-