Memory and the future: transnational politics, ethics and society

Abstract
Introduction: Memory and the Future: Why a Change of Focus is Necessary; Y.Gutman, A.Sodaro& A.D.Brown
PART 1: MEMORY THROUGH SPACE AND TIME
The Internationalization of Memory - How Meanings and Models Travel the World
Changing Temporalities and the Internationalization of Memory Cultures; D.Levy
Misremembering the Holocaust; R.Poole
Memory and History from Past to Future: A Dialogue with Dori Laub on Trauma and Testimony; A Conversation Between Dori Laub and Federico Finchelstein
Remembering Yesterday to Protect Tomorrow: How the Current Paradigm of Memorialization Relies on Assumptions about the Relationship between Past and Future; L.Bickford
Part 2: FORMS AND GENRES
Narrative, Oral History and Visual Memory - How the Form Serves the Aim
The Role of Conversations in Shaping Individual and Collective Memory, Attitudes and Behavior;J.Koppel & W.Hirst
Re-Presenting Victim and Perpetrator: The Role of Photographs in US Service Members' Testimony Against War; K.Spring
How Shall We Remember Srebrenica? Will the Language of Law Structure our Memory?; S.Leydesdorff
PART 3: TEMPORALITY AND THE POLITICAL
Temporality and the Political I: Utopia
Refugees from Utopia: Remembering, Forgetting, and the Making of the Feminist Memoir Project;A.Snitow
Happy Memories under the Mushroom Cloud: Utopia and Memory in Oak Ridge, Tennessee; L.Freeman
Temporality and the Political II: Revenge
Authorizing Death: Memory Politics and States of Exception in Contemporary El Salvador;G.Santamaria-Balmaceda
Enacting Past and Future at Yasukuni Shrine, Japan; D.P.Janes
Afterword: J.Olick