The Crypt: Probing the Obscure Administration of Cultural Memory
The prescribed means to engage with the past through a variety ofculturally upheld techniques is receiving wider attention within the humanities today. This is partly due to the growing field of so-called ‘cultural memory studies’. Religion is typically evoked in these circumstances as an exemplary entry into processes of long-term cultural mediation, and the different interests permeating the maintenance and obfuscation of a time-honoured past. The article is devoted to a concept that has attracted comparatively little attention among students of cultural memory: the crypt and its various analogies to the question of remembrance without memory.
2015 ◽
Vol 17
(2)
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pp. 7
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2020 ◽
Vol ahead-of-print
(ahead-of-print)
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