For a cultural historian, Beyond the Archive proves to be an inspirational endeavor... [It] offers a rich analysis of the various traditions and ways that memory has been understood.
Maarit Leskelä-Kärki, Project Muse
There is no better guide to 'the dilemma of memory' across disciplines than Jens Brockmeier. This carefully crafted book, infused with the spirit of Mnemosyne, the goddess of memory, time and language, is at once philosophical, artistic and scientific, bringing together the likes of Marcel Proust, Ansel Kiefer, and Isaac Newton, as well as the most recent neurological research on the human brain. Long after finishing the last page, ideas linger and certain passages beckon the reader back into this exciting world of a universe with an 'infinite multitude of clocks'. Beyond the Archive is a true gift for anyone interested in this most fundamental question about the role of memory in human lives.
Molly Andrews, Professor of Political Psychology and Co-director, Centre for Narrative Research, University of East London
In Beyond the Archive, Jens Brockmeier masterfully evaluates the limits of traditional approaches to the study of memory. He furthers his argument by insightfully probing the ways in which narrative approaches can enhance our understanding of people's efforts to make sense of the past and thereby ground both their individual and collective identity. Covering a daunting range of literature, from the humanities through the social sciences to the cognitive and neurosciences, Brockmeier's book provides a strong foundation on which to build new approaches to the study of memory.
William Hirst, Malcolm B. Smith Professor of Psychology, New School for Social Research
A large-minded re-envisaging of memory built on an unrivalled depth of learning in cognitive neuroscience, history of ideas and narrative studies. . . A superb interdisciplinary synthesis that reconceptualises autobiographical meaning as acts of remembering and self-interpretation in the context of cultural memory.
Brian Hurwitz, Professor of Medicine and the Arts, Director of the Centre for the Humanities and Health, King's College London