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Full Description
Within France, the expression "duty of memory" (devoir de mémoire) speaks to a complex and ever-evolving relationship with the past. Emerging in the 1970s, this term raised questions about memorialization which dominated public debates in the 1990s, highlighting France's entanglements with colonialism and the Holocaust. Drawing on a variety of interviews, archival sources, and data surveys, author Sébastien Ledoux spotlights how the trajectory of this term offers a lens for understanding contemporary societies' relationship with the past on a global scale.
Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Inventing the Origins of "Duty of Memory"
Part I: Emergence (Pre-1992)
Chapter 1.The Sign of a New Language of Memory
Chapter 2. The "Memory of Auschwitz," a New Reference in the Present
Chapter 3. The Invention of "Memory Policy" (1980s)
Part II: Proliferation (1992-1993)
Chapter 4. Publicization of "Duty of Memory" as Part of a Rhetoric of Denunciation (1992)
Chapter 5. "Duty of Memory" as an Official Expression (1993)
Chapter 6. A Sociohistorical Analysis of the Crystallization of "Duty of Memory"
Part III: Grammar (1995-2005)
Chapter 7. The Memory of Holocaust as a Frame of Reference
Chapter 8. A Tool for Mobilizing Other Memories
Chapter 9. "Governance of the Past": The Example of the Vote on "Memory Laws" (1998-2005)
Part IV: Defiance (2000-2012)
Chapter 10. Criticism of Scientific Discourse
Chapter 11. Political Distancing
Chapter 12. "Duty of Memory": A Shift to the Local Level
Conclusion: Duty of Memory: A Global History
Bibliography
Index