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The Story of Memory

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On the 4-5 September 2014, the University of Roehampton will host The Story of Memory, a Memory Network conference.

The Story of Memory seeks to pose new questions about the relationship between the senses, cognition, memory, and emotion, and to reinvigorate the debate about the return to a critical investigation of storytelling in the twenty-first century. We invite papers that consider the following questions across disciplines: How does storytelling shape our memories and identity in new ways, and how is narrative involved in the conceptualization of memory across disciplines? How do culturally specific storytelling traditions change and inflect memory processes differently? In what new ways is therapeutic storytelling used as an intervention in cases of psychological trauma? How do non-verbal modes (including architecture and music) tell stories? What is the role of the senses in storytelling? Can there be a story in the medium of taste or smell? How do disciplines not necessarily close to literature and linguistics narrate knowledge differently, and how can the Humanities rethink traditional narratological frameworks through the different story-forms generated by other disciplines? How do new influences create new, and reshape existing, genres such as (auto)biography and life-writing (i.e., ‘brain memoirs’; e.g. McCrum, Hustvedt, Shulman, Ross). Neuroscientist too have turned their attention to how the brain uses narrative to integrate the senses, emotion and memory into the experiential self, so what can the ‘harder’ sciences learn from frameworks offered by disciplines in the Humanities? How does the changing form of stories in the age of Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Youtube, and Storify shape our sense of selfhood? How do we narrate and curate (online) archives, and the bulk collection of data? What are the ethical questions that new forms of storytelling generate?

Please send all enquiries, as well as 250-word proposals for 25 minute papers, or 600-word proposals for special panels consisting of 3 papers, and a brief bio-note, to memorynetwork@roehampton.ac.uk by 30 June 2014.

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News Postgraduate Traces

Memory and Diaries: a Postgraduate Memory Network Seminar

The Postgraduate Memory Network will hold its second seminar at the University of Roehampton on Tuesday 29 April between 3 and 5pm. The seminar is entitled “Memory and Diaries” and will consist of four ten-minute papers on this topic followed by a general discussion. Those who wish to present a paper are invited to send a 300-word abstract to pg.memorynetwork@gmail.com by 15 April – all are invited to attend.

The event will take place in room 204 of the Fincham building at Digby Stuart College. For more information, please visit the PGMN’s websites:

http://pgmemorynetwork.wordpress.com

https://www.facebook.com/PostGradMemoryNetwork

The image above is taken from the diaries of Clive Wearing, a British musicologist, conductor, tenor and keyboardist who suffers from chronic anterograde and retrograde amnesia. Since contracting a virus that attacked his central nervous system, he has been unable to form new memories. His diaries, begun during his recovery and carried on for over two decades, materialise the unfamiliar experience of a life lived entirely in the present tense.