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Photography and cultural memory: a methodological exploration 

Author: Annette Kuhn (Hide Biography)
Biography:  Annette Kuhn writes and teaches on films, cinema history, visual culture and cultural memory. She is Visiting Professor in the School of Languages, Linguistics and Film at Queen Mary, University of London, and a Fellow of the British Academy. Her books include An Everyday Magic: Cinema and Cultural Memory (2002), Family Secrets: Acts of Memory and Imagination () and (co-edited with Kirsten Emiko McAllister) Locating Memory: Photographic Acts (2006).
DOI: 10.1080/14725860701657175
Publication Frequency: 3 issues per year
Published in: journal Visual Studies, Volume 22, Issue 3 December 2007 , pages 283 - 292
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
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Abstract

Recent years have seen a flowering of research and scholarship on cultural memory across the humanities and social sciences. Among the many facets of this work is a quest to extend and deepen understanding of how personal memory operates in the cultural sphere: its distinguishing features; how, where and when it is produced; how people make use of it in their daily lives; how personal or individual memory connects with shared, public forms of memory; and ultimately, how memory figures in, and even shapes, the social body and social worlds. Personal and family photographs figure importantly in cultural memory, and memory work with photographs offers a particularly productive route to understanding the social and cultural aspects of memory. Beginning with a study of one photograph, this article develops and interrogates a set of interlocking memory work methods for investigating the forms and everyday uses of 'ordinary photography' and how these figure in the production of memory.
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