《相连的记忆:从波兰到印度的国际分治政治》

IF 3.5 2区 社会学 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS International Political Sociology Pub Date : 2022-10-17 DOI:10.1093/ips/olac016
Kerry Goettlich
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章将关联记忆理论化,换句话说,人们如何通过不同背景下领土划分的关联历史来记住彼此的记忆。它声称,社会记忆可以超越其原始背景,超越了理解超国家“记忆共同体”的努力,也超越了将世界记忆理解为包含全人类的薄记忆共同体的努力。它建立在“关联历史”的概念之上,认为现有的世界政治社会记忆方法要么忽视了跨越国家和地区边界的联系,要么将国家模式扩大到全球水平。这篇文章用领土划分的历史来说明三种类型的连接记忆:交感记忆、替代记忆和模块记忆。分区通常以比较或汇总的方式进行研究,排除了分区相互影响的可能性。但是,从瓜分波兰到奥斯曼帝国的解体,再到爱尔兰、巴勒斯坦和印度,瓜分往往是超越国家背景、以复数形式被人们记住的事件。这样的记忆反过来又改变了未来可想象的可能性,例如,通过为未来分区提供先例或警告。
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Connected Memories: The International Politics of Partition, from Poland to India
This article theorizes connected memory, or in other words how people remember each other's memories, through the connected histories of territorial partition in different contexts. It claims that social memories can travel beyond their original context, pushing beyond efforts to understand supranational “mnemonic communities,” or to understand cosmopolitan memory as a thin memory community encompassing all humanity. It builds on the idea of “connected histories,” arguing that existing approaches to social memory in world politics either neglect connections across national and regional boundaries or scale up the national model to the global level. The article uses the history of territorial partitions as an illustration of three types of connected memory: sympathetic, vicarious, and modular. Partition has often been studied in comparative or aggregative ways, ruling out the possibility that partitions affect each other. But from the partitions of Poland to the breakup of the Ottoman Empire, to Ireland, Palestine, and India, partitions have often been events remembered beyond the national context and in the plural. Such memories have, in turn, altered the imaginable possibilities of the future, for example, by providing precedents for or warnings about future partitions.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
12.50%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: International Political Sociology (IPS), responds to the need for more productive collaboration among political sociologists, international relations specialists and sociopolitical theorists. It is especially concerned with challenges arising from contemporary transformations of social, political, and global orders given the statist forms of traditional sociologies and the marginalization of social processes in many approaches to international relations. IPS is committed to theoretical innovation, new modes of empirical research and the geographical and cultural diversification of research beyond the usual circuits of European and North-American scholarship.
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