The sexual politics of time: confession, nostalgia, memory
On confession -- Confession, time, and sexual difference -- The (sexual) politics of nostalgia -- Film theory, masculinity, and mourning -- Remembering ourselves
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On confession -- Confession, time, and sexual difference -- The (sexual) politics of nostalgia -- Film theory, masculinity, and mourning -- Remembering ourselves
6. Children: Memories, Fantasies and Narratives: From Dilemma to ComplexityMemory: Remembering and Forgetting; The Family Romance; An Account of the Pilot Study; From Being at a Loss to Becoming Textured; Family Narratives and Children's Autobiography; Memory, Fantasy and Place; Acknowledgments; Notes; Bibliography; 7. Memory Work: the Key to Women's Anxiety; Preliminary Conclusion; Postscript on Memory Work as Sociological Method; Notes; Bibliography; 8. A Journey Through Memory; Revisionist Autobiography, Visual Autobiography, and Memory Work; Some Theses on Memory; Notes; Bibliography.
In: European Journal of Women's Studies, Volume 13, Issue 4, p. 384-386
In: Signs: journal of women in culture and society, Volume 28, Issue 1, p. 457-459
ISSN: 1545-6943
In: Cultural values, Volume 5, Issue 1, p. 59-78
ISSN: 1467-8713
In: Feminist review, Volume 40, Issue 1, p. 85-93
ISSN: 1466-4380
In: Feminist review, Issue 40, p. 85
ISSN: 1466-4380
In: Feminist review, Volume 18, Issue 1, p. 133-136
ISSN: 1466-4380
In: Creative, social, and transnational perspectives on translation
1. The Lost Clock: Remembering and Translating Enigmatic Messages from Migrant Objects (Susannah Radstone) -- 2. Tactile Translations: Re-Locating the Northern Irish Disappeared (Alison Ribeiro de Menezes) -- 3. The Past in the Present: Life Narratives and Trauma in the Vietnamese Diaspora (Nathalie Huynh Chau Nguyen) -- 4. Beyond the Written: Embodying the Sensorial as an Act of Remembering (Grace Pundyk) -- 5. Having Left, Not Having Yet Arrived : Migrant Interiority, Translation, and Memory (Maria Tumarkin) Section 2: Translating and Migrating Languages, Ideologies, and Identities -- 6. There Was a Woman, a Translator, Who Wanted to Be Another Person: Jhumpa Lahiri and the Exchange Politics of Linguistic Exile (Mridula Nath Chakraborty) -- 7. Foiba: Genealogy of an Untranslatable Word (Diego Lazzarich) -- 8. Translating Australia: Language, Migrant Education, and Television (Kyle Harvey and Kate Darian-Smith) -- 9. Can We Talk About Poland?: Intergenerational Translations of Home (Katarzyna Kwapisz Williams and Jacqueline Lo) -- 10. Changing Places: Translational Narratives of Migration, Cultural Memory, and Belonging (Rita Wilson)
The volume reconstructs the work of the great philosophical and literary figures of the last two centuries who recast the concept of memory and brought it into the forefront of the modernist and postmodernist imagination—among them, Bergson, Halbwachs, Freud, Proust, Benjamin, Adorno, Derrida, and Deleuze. Drawing on recent advances in the sciences and in the humanities, the contributors address the question of how memory works, highlighting transactions between the interiority of subjective memory and the larger fields of public or collective memory.
In: Memory and narrative series
In: Routledge studies in memory and narrative [11]
In: Feminist review, Issue 18, p. 133
ISSN: 1466-4380