User:ThomasW/Notes Mediated Memories in the Digital Age
Van Dijck, José (2007) Mediated Memories in the Digital Age, United States of America, Stanford University Press
“American psychologist Susan Bluck contends that autobiographical memory has three main functions: to preserve a sense of being a coherent person over time, to strengthen social bonds by sharing personal memories, and to use past experiences to construct models to understand inner wolds of self and others.” Page 3
“Recording the event through video, pictures, or a written account enhances its actual experiences” page 5
“In general, personal norms–a tension we can trace in both the activity of remembering and in the object of memory” page 6
“Any picture–or, for that matter, any diary entry or video take even if ordained to end up in specific format, may materialize in an unintended or unforeseen arrangement” page 7
“On of Halbwachs important observations is that collective memory is never the plain sum of individual remembrances: every personal memory is cemented in an idiosyncratic perspective, but these perspectives never culminate into a singular collective view” page 9
“Mediated memories refers both to act of memory (construing a relational identity etched in dimensions of time) and to memory products (personal memory objects as sites where individual mends and collective cultures meets).” page 22
“personal memory is situated inside the brain–the deepest, most intimated physical space of the human body. On the other hand, personal memories seem to be located in the many objects [..] (like most of us) create to serve as reminders of lived experiences.” Page 28
“Bergsons view that memory I not exclusively a cognitive process but also a action–oriented response of a living subject to stimuli in his or her external environment prohibits the idea of a pure memory preceding its materialization in a mental image” page 30
“Walter Benjamin writing on reproducible memorabilia like personal photographs called them the “modern relics of nostalgia,” the meanings of which lies hidden in the layers of time affecting the appearances.” page 36
“photo chemicals and ink on paper tend to fade, and home videos lose quality as a result of frequent replays (and even if left unused, their quality deteriorates) In facts, it is exactly this material transformation–its decay or decomposing–that becomes part of a mutating memory’s: the growing imperfect state of these items connotes continuity between past and present.” page 37
“We take pictures on vacation for later remembrance but also to convince our friends at home of our relaxed and happy sojourning state;“page 39
“Similar to the myth of disembodiment, digitization often promotes the erroneous presumption of demineralization. In the first decade of a new millennium, our “technologies of self” are being rapidly replaced by digital instruments, and we ares still in the midst of finding out how to adapt to the cultural forms and practise that inevitable come along with this retooling of memory artefact.” page 46
“Machines and software formats may be become obsolete, hard drive and anything but robust, and digital files may start to degrade or become indecipherable. Ironically, problems of preservation and access to personal memories, as a result of their digital condition, could become become even more complex than before” page 48
“there is no single, uniform definition of what a diary is, and over the past centuries, its uniform definition of what a diary is and over the past centuries, its classification has been anything but homogeneous” page 57
MORE TO BE ADDED