TY - BOOK ID - 11333155 TI - Global Memoryscapes : Contesting Remembrance in a Transnational Age AU - Phillips, Kendall R. AU - Reyes, G. Mitchell. AU - Lavrence, Christine. AU - Haskins, Ekaterina V. AU - Cervantes, Cynthia. AU - Sorensen, Kristin. AU - Lindauer, Margaret A. AU - Mack, Katherine Elizabeth AU - Turan, Zeynep. AU - Butalia, Urvashi. PY - 2011 SN - 081738569X 9780817356767 0817356762 9780817385699 9780817317430 0817317430 PB - Alabama : University of Alabama Press, DB - UniCat KW - Globalization KW - Memory KW - Collective memory KW - Transnationalism KW - National characteristics KW - Social psychology KW - Sociology & Social History KW - Social Sciences KW - Social Change KW - Social aspects KW - Collective memory. KW - Transnationalism. KW - National characteristics. KW - Social psychology. KW - Erinnerung. KW - Globalisierung. KW - Kollektives Gedächtnis. KW - Nationalbewusstsein. KW - Nationalcharakter. KW - Social aspects. KW - Mass psychology KW - Psychology, Social KW - Characteristics, National KW - Identity, National KW - Images, National KW - National identity KW - National images KW - National psychology KW - Psychology, National KW - Collective remembrance KW - Common memory KW - Cultural memory KW - Emblematic memory KW - Historical memory KW - National memory KW - Public memory KW - Social memory KW - Retention (Psychology) KW - Trans-nationalism KW - Transnational migration KW - Human ecology KW - Psychology KW - Social groups KW - Sociology KW - Anthropology KW - Nationalism KW - Ethnopsychology KW - Exceptionalism KW - Group identity KW - Intellect KW - Thought and thinking KW - Comprehension KW - Executive functions (Neuropsychology) KW - Mnemonics KW - Perseveration (Psychology) KW - Reproduction (Psychology) KW - International relations UR - http://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:11333155 AB - The transnational movement of people and ideas has led scholars throughout the humanities to reconsider many core concepts. Among them is the notion of public memory and how it changes when collective memories are no longer grounded within the confines of the traditional nation-state. An introduction by coeditors Kendall Phillips and Mitchell Reyes provides a context for examining the challenges of remembrance in a globalized world. In their essay they posit the idea of the "global memoryscape," a sphere in which memories circulate among inc ER -