This work is a study of the various ways in which individuals
and groups use memory narratives to express and form the quality of
their lives. Activities of remembering, forgetting, reconstructing,
metamorphosizing, and vicariously remembering are described for
cultures in Latin America, Africa, Europe, Canada, and the United
States. The authors find that the territory of memory is bounded by
neither space nor time, but exists in the minds of individuals and
groups. Memory changes as individuals and cultures change, forming
a dialogue between the past and the present in response to present
and changing needs. Memories of dislocation, war, torture, famine,
and separation are given particular attention for the way they
create meaning in the present and future lives of those who
remember and share their memories.
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