Reader Collective Memory-Work: Open Access

Reader Collective Memory-Work

(Edited by Robert Hamm)

Open access: download here.

The Reader Collective Memory-Work is meant to foster further exchange about Collective Memory-Work, its use and usefulness, methodological questions, aspects of its adaptation/s, critical elements found in CMW, exemplary applications in various fields of practice and research.

Included in the Reader are: first-time English translations of texts by the groups involved in the Frauenformen projects with Frigga Haug; reprints of chapters on Collective Memory-Work that are helpful to understand trajectories of its development and adaptations; contributions about connections and perspectives for applications of Collective Memory-Work and discussions of method and methodology.

Contributions:

Ana Đorđević and Zorana Antonijević

Exploring Collective Memory Work in Serbia: construction of gender and ethnicity in post-conflict context.

Bettina Pirker

Guilt without atonement. Lo.Li.Ta. A female fantasy?

Bianca Fiedler

Collective Memory Work with refugee women who don’t have a common language.

Brigitte Hipfl, Erica Burman and Robert Hamm

Time travel: Collective Memory-Work 2002 – 2022.

Christina Hee Pedersen

A memory work on longings for feminist activism.

Daisy Pillay, Jennifer Charteris, Adele Nye, Ruth Foulkes

Pushing Boundaries: emancipatory collective memory work and entangled poetic assemblages.

Doris Allhutter

Memory traces in society-technology relations. How to produce cracks in infrastructural power.

Frauke Schwarting and Eva Stäbler

Women’s interests and assertive strategies.

Frigga Haug

Victims or Culprits? Reflections on Women’s Behaviour.

The relation of experience and theory in subject scientific research.

Struggling for coherence: towards a theory of memory-work as feminist praxis.

Inge Morisse, Petra Sauerwald, Heike Wilke, Marianne Zank-Weber

Insecurity in politics – Diary of female trade unionists.

Innsbrucker Autorinnenkollektiv

Living Contradictions – Staging posts of female identity.

Jenny Onyx

The assumptions on which Collective Memory Work is based.

Julie McLeod and Rachel Thomson

Memory-Work.

June Crawford, Susan Kippax, Jenny Onyx, Una Gault and Pam Benton

Memory Work: The method.

Karen Falconer Al-Hindi, Pamela Moss, Leslie Kern and Roberta Hawkins

Tending to the feminist academic self.

Keitha-Gail Martin-Kerr and Colleen Clements

Playing games with theory: Collective memory work and game theory in post-qualitative inquiry.

Marion Breiter and Kerstin Witt-Löw

Collective Memory-Work on fear of success: a successful women’s studies seminar.

Niamh Stephenson and Dimitri Papadopoulos

The collective subject of memory-work.

Nita Mishra, Jenny Onyx and Trees McCormick

Using Collective Memory Work in development education.

Philip Taucher and Ulrich Lipp

Thinking beyond storytelling.

Projekt Frauengrundstudium (Women’s Foundational Studies)

Why we introduce a part on experience in Women’s Foundational Studies.

Against the lack of concepts of the mundane: Collective Memory-Work.

Susanne Gannon and Bronwyn Davies

Doing collective biography through theoretical, material, affective, embodied assemblages.

Teachers from Free Alternative Schools

What do pupils need teachers for?

Vic Blake, Jeff Hearn, David Jackson, Randy Barber, Richard Johnson and Zbyszek Luczynski

Collective memory work with older men: ageing, gender politics and masculinities.

There is also a print version of the Reader available (in two volumes).

For the print version please inquire here.