Re: M&D, the people’s memory vs the internet
Joseph Tracy
brook7 at sover.net
Thu Apr 19 16:57:02 CDT 2018
Thanks for pointing to the exact reference. Good thoughts and questions.
I think of remembrance as an active force, a choice. I think of memory as residual, passive, malleable.
But I increasingly think of memory as the DNA of mindedness, the deepseated coding of a culture. It seems to me to impy a whole set of inheritances, instincts, patterns, traits, predetermined plans.
OK back to the studio.
> On Apr 19, 2018, at 3:16 AM, Thomas Eckhardt <thomas.eckhardt at uni-bonn.de> wrote:
>
> "Remembrance" belongs to the people, is what Cherrycoke says on page 349, juxtaposing"Remembrance" and "History". Is remembrance the same as memory? Isn't there an emphasis on honouring the past with "remembrance" instead of merely acknowledging and/or recollecting it?
> At least since Wordsworth and Coleridge, memory in literature has been linked to the imagination. A historical novel may be seen as being created from memory, historical facts as in "Play-things for lawyers", and imagination. This is obviously the case with M&D, which is also a cock-and-bull story in the Sternian tradition. The same goes for Cherrycoke's wildly improbable, fantastic tale which takes up most of M&D.
> One might also think about the link between uncharted geographical territory (M&D) or cyberspace (BE) about to be conquered and subsumed, and the imagination. The American West and cyberspace before Facebook,
> Google, Amazon etc. (although the Internet was developed as part of CoG measures, as Ernie notes, so perhaps there has always been a snake in the grass) promise freedom and are also blank spaces that invite projection -- very much like the white hump of Moby-Dick does.
>
>
> Am 18.04.2018 um 19:47 schrieb Smoke Teff:
>> Memory, Cherrycoke tells us, belongs to the people.
>> Anyone have any thoughts on how the internet, the right to be forgotten, and/or Bleeding Edge play into this?
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