The Ethics of Memory – Avishai Margalit – 1998, Harvard University Press
The Ethics of Memory
Avishai Margalit’s The Ethics of Memory delves into the moral obligations surrounding collective remembrance and the ethical considerations inherent in how societies choose to remember – or forget – their past. The book centers on a distinction between ‘thick’ and ‘thin’ ethical memory. ‘Thick’ memory involves remembering events in vivid detail, often carrying emotional weight and influencing present actions. ‘Thin’ memory, conversely, focuses on retaining only the fundamental moral lessons of the past, prioritizing ethical understanding over precise historical recollection.
Historical / Cultural Context
Published in 1998, The Ethics of Memory arose from a period of intense reflection on the Holocaust and other historical traumas. Margalit wrote in the wake of increasing discussions surrounding historical responsibility, reconciliation, and the dangers of historical revisionism. The work contributes to broader philosophical debates about the nature of memory, its role in identity formation, and its implications for political life. It is situated within a broader context of post-war reckoning and the challenges of constructing narratives of national identity. The rise of memory studies as a discipline further provided a fertile ground for this work.
Who This Book Is For
This book is best suited for readers interested in philosophy, ethics, political theory, and the psychology of collective memory. It’s relevant to those studying the impact of historical trauma on societies, and the moral dimensions of remembering and forgetting. While accessible to a general educated audience, the book engages with complex philosophical arguments. It would be valuable for academic work focusing on historical narratives and their social consequences, or on the political use of memory.
Further Reading
- Paul Ricoeur, Memory, History, Forgetting (2004): A similarly nuanced exploration of the relationship between individual and collective memory.
- Pierre Nora, Realms of Memory (1996-1998): A multi-volume study of the sites and symbols of French collective memory.
- Jan Assmann, Cultural Memory and Early Civilization (1992): Examines the formation of cultural memory in ancient societies.
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