This book examines the ways in which ghosts haunt and shape cultural identities and memory, considering the manner in which the fluctuations of such identities sometimes imply the rethinking or rewriting of the past.

Drawing on case studies in historical, political, literary and linguistic studies, it explores the narratives that produce imagined communities and identities and the places in which cultural identities are constructed through memory, asking how far these identities and memories disinherit or exclude otherness, and how far ghosts disturb orderly narratives, inviting multiple readings of the past. Thematically organized to consider the persistence of ghosts within present memory and identity, the creation of new identities through intertwining narratives of the past, and the reclamation of identities in postcolonial contexts, Memory and Identity: Ghosts of the past in the English-speaking world offers a multi-disciplinary examination of the concept of haunting.

Memory and Identity will appeal to scholars of sociology, anthropology, cultural studies and history with interests in memory and identity.

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This book examines the ways in which ghosts haunt and shape cultural identities and memory, considering the manner in which the fluctuations of such identities sometimes imply the rethinking or rewriting of the past.

Les mer

Introduction Part 1: Shackled identities Chapter 1. Ghosts of the Past and the Oxford English Dictionary Chapter 2. The Invisible American Shoeshine Boy: Creation and Persistence of a Ghostly Icon 3. Australian Ghosts: Representations of the Past in Australia 4. Ghosts from the Future: Post-Apocalyptic Narratives in Scotland and the Displacement of Memory Part 2: Multi-layered identities 5. Ghosting the Victorians in A.S. Byatt, Kate Atkinson and Michèle Roberts’s neo-Victorian fiction 6. Whose Past is it Before Us? The Shaping of Identity in Scotland’s 2014 Referendum on Independence 7. Haunted by the Lessons of 'the Good War’: Post-Cold War Contestation of World War II Narratives Part 3: Reclaimed identities 8. Haunting in a Postcolony: Race, Place and Intergenerational Trauma on a South African Campus 9. First World War Memorial Ghosts and the Reshaping of South African Identity: Remembering the SS Mendi in Delville Wood 10. Blyton’s Ghosts: Childhood Receptions in India and Britain 11. Decolonial Poetics: Ghosts of Coloniality, Capitalism, and Care in Contemporary Anglophone Literature

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032012841
Publisert
2022-10-24
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
210

Biografisk notat

Linda Pillière is Professor of English Language and Linguistics at Aix-Marseille Université, France. She is the co-editor of Standardising English: Norms and Margins in the History of the English Language and Standardisation and Variation in English Language(s) and author of Intralingual Translation of British Novels: A Multimodal Stylistic Perspective.

Karine Bigand is Senior Lecturer in Irish Studies at Aix-Marseille Université, France. She has recently co-authored Faces and Places. Northern Ireland, 1975–2020.