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Remembering the Falklands War: Media, Memory and Identity: Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies

Autor Sarah Maltby
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 sep 2016
This book offers an empirically informed understanding of how identity and agency become wholly embedded within practices of media-remembering. It draws upon data collected from the British military, the BBC and Falkland Islanders during the 30th Anniversary of the Falklands war to uniquely offer multiple perspectives on a single ‘remembering’ phenomenon. The study offers an analysis of the convergence, interconnectedness and interdependence of media and remembering, specifically the production, interpretation and negotiation of remembering in the media ecology. In so doing it not only examines the role of media in the formation and sustaining of collective memory but also the ways those who remember or are remembered in media texts become implicated in these processes. 

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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781137556592
ISBN-10: 1137556595
Pagini: 143
Ilustrații: XIII, 172 p. 38 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.38 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2016
Editura: Palgrave Macmillan UK
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Seria Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

1.Introduction.- 2.The Media and The Falklands.- 3.The Military Story: Multiple Identities, Subjectivity and Narrative Sense-Giving.- 4.The BBC Story: Identity and Memory Work as News Determinants.- 5.The Islanders story: Confused Identities, Interpellation and Subjugation.- 6.Media-Remembering: Power, Identity and Agency 


Notă biografică

Sarah Maltby is Senior Lecturer in Media and Communications at Sussex University, UK. 


Textul de pe ultima copertă

‘This book provides original insights into the intersections of war, the military, subjectivity and identity in relation to memory, that reveal a much deeper understanding of the complex processes of remembering.’
– Anna Reading, Kings College, University of London, UK

‘Sarah Maltby, in this strikingly original study, brings a rare immediacy to how the media performs and the uses to which it is put in the crafting of national meaning and memory.’
– James Aulich, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK

'Maltby contributes an innovative, multi-faceted and thoughtful memory framework to a highly mediated war (its representation and commemoration) without losing sight of the memories of ‘the person’ as an important inheritor of mediated memories.’
– Joanne Garde Hansen, University of Warwick, UK

‘Sarah Maltby’s insightful analysis adds an important dimension to our collective understanding of a conflict whose profound political and cultural significance comes more and more into focus as the events themselves fade into the historical distance.’
– Kevin Foster, Monash University, Australia

‘Sarah Maltby provides a sophisticated discussion of the questions of power, agency and identity that arise from convergent and divergent forms of collective memory.’
– Michael Pickering, Loughborough University, UK

‘This book provides a fascinating insight into how collective and institutional identities are imagined and contested, performed and disrupted in practices of remembering.’
– Phil Hammond, London South Bank University, UK

This book offers an empirically informed understanding of how identity and agency become wholly embedded within practices of media-remembering. It draws upon data collected from the the British military, the BBC and Falkland Islanders during the 30th Anniversary of the Falklands war to uniquely offer multiple perspectives on a single ‘remembering’ phenomenon. The study offers an analysis of the convergence, interconnectedness and interdependence of media and remembering, specifically the production, interpretation and negotiation of remembering in the media ecology. In so doing it not only examines the role of media in the formation and sustaining of collective memory but also the ways those who are remembered or remember in media texts become implicated in these processes. 

Sarah Maltby is Senior Lecturer in Media and Communications at Sussex University, UK.