Newsletter of Phenomenology

Keeping phenomenologists informed since May 2002

202658

Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke

2016

346 Pages

ISBN 978-1-349-56642-6

Memory in the twenty-first century

new critical perspectives from the arts, humanities, and sciences

Edited by

Sebastian Groes

This book maps and analyses the changing state of memory at the start of the twenty-first century via short essays written by scientists, scholars and writers. An experimental, multidisciplinary volume, it presents new research whilst recontextualising memory by investigating the impact of new conditions such as the digital revolution, climate change and an ageing population. It contains contributions by researchers at the foreground of new thinking about the human mind, such as N. Katherine Hayles and Claire Colebrook, as wellas by writers such as Will Self, Maggie Gee and Adam Roberts. The interlinking work shows that the multiplicity of revolutions force us to reconsider our thinking about what it means to be a human being in the twenty-first century. Memory is increasingly becoming a collective, globally shared networking activity, whilst the role of the human mind is increasingly marginal, and taken over by machines. Human nature is rapidly changing.

Publication details

Full citation:

Groes, S. (ed) (2016). Memory in the twenty-first century: new critical perspectives from the arts, humanities, and sciences, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Groes Sebastian

1-13

Open Access Link
Metaphors of memory

Depper Corin

27-37

Open Access Link
Proust recalled

Leigh Gibson E.

42-50

Open Access Link
The persistence of surrealism

Baxter Jeannette

51-56

Open Access Link
Misled by metaphor

Carr Nicholas

67-69

Open Access Link
Calling Gaia

Besser Stephan

70-75

Open Access Link
What's in a brain?

Self Will

89-96

Open Access Link
Will Self and his inner seahorse

Spiers Hugo J.

97-102

Open Access Link
Living digitally

Moncur Wendy

108-112

Open Access Link
The oceanic literary reading mind

Burke Michael

119-124

Open Access Link
Memory and the reading substrate

van der Weel Adriaan

125-129

Open Access Link
Time that is intolerant

Colebrook Claire

147-158

Open Access Link
Climate change and memory

Hulme Mike

159-162

Open Access Link
Memories of snow

Garrard Greg

163-169

Open Access Link
Writing climate change

Gee Maggie

170-174

Open Access Link
Against nostalgia

Groes Sebastian

175-187

Open Access Link
The trace of the future

Currie Mark

199-204

Open Access Link
Simulation and the evolution of thought

Bryson Joanna J.

205-207

Open Access Link
Imaginative anticipation

Bland Jessica

208-212

Open Access Link
Memory is no longer what it used to be

Pisters Patricia

213-217

Open Access Link
Remembering

Squire Larry R.; Wixted John T.

251-262

Open Access Link
Directed forgetting

Brandt Karen R.

263-267

Open Access Link
Our plastic brain

Yeung Heather H.

276-279

Open Access Link
Amnesia in young adult fiction

Waller Alison

286-291

Open Access Link
Remembering responsibly

Coker Thomas F.; Yeung Heather H.

292-297

Open Access Link
Losing the self?

Colebrook Claire

307-315

Open Access Link
Memory and voices

Waugh Patricia

316-324

Open Access Link
Rereading the self

Waller Alison

325-329

Open Access Link
Neuroscience and posthuman memory

Pepperell Robert

330-333

Open Access Link
The confabulation of self

Bryson Joanna J.

334-337

Open Access Link
Malingering and memory

Abreu Neander

338-342

Open Access Link
Trauma and the truth

Meeter Martijn

343-346

Open Access Link

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