The Fluidity of Collective Memory: Time, Place, and Meaning-Making in Recalling the Past
By (Author) Katerina Krlov
Edited by Maria-Alina Asavei
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
19th February 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
272
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
In their collective dimension, memories are fluidtheir form and content not fixed, but constantly adjusted by locations, places, generations, cultures, traditions, politics, epistemic authorities, and historical predictabilities. The contributions in this volume do not address memory in its psychological dimension, but explore the mnemonic materializations in cultural and social settings. Thus, this volume explores memory as a temporal and spatial dimension of meaning-making through an interdisciplinary lens by bringing to the forefront theories and methodologies from memory studies, continental philosophy, hermeneutics, anthropology, political philosophy, digital humanities, and cultural anthropology. Memory theorists posit that we aim to understand, not just how the past is remembered, but also how its meaning is changed, over-written and challenged. (Rigney, 2018: 254) This aim is also pursued by philosophers of history and politics among other social scientists.
Katerina Krlov is Associate Professor in the Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, at Charles University, Czechia.
Maria-Alina Asavei is Associate Professor in the Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, at Charles University, Czechia.