Many students of memory assume that the practice of memory changed dramatically around 1800; this volume shows that there was much continuity as well as change. Premodern ways of negotiating memories of pain and loss, for instance, were indeed quite different to those in the modern West. Yet by examining memory practices and drawing on evidence from early modern England, France, Germany, Ireland, Hungary, the Low Countries and Ukraine, the case studies in this volume highlight the extent to which early modern memory was already a multimedia affair, with many political uses, and affecting stakeholders at all levels of society.
Erika Kuijpers is a postdoctoral researcher at Leiden University. She has published widely on the history of migration, literacy, and personal memories of the Dutch Revolt.
Judith Pollmann is professor of early modern Dutch history at Leiden University. She is the director of the NWO VICI project Tales of the Revolt. Memory, oblivion and identity in the Low Countries, 1566-1700.
Johannes Müller is a PhD candidate at the Institute for History at Leiden University, where he is currently completing a dissertation on the memory cultures of Dutch exile networks in early modern Europe.
Jasper van der Steen is a PhD candidate at Leiden Universityâs Institute for History. He is currently completing his dissertation on memory politics after the Revolt of the Netherlands.
ââThis is [â¦] a valuable contribution to the genre of memory studiesââ.
Brian G. H. Ditcham, University of Gillingham. In: Sixteenth Century Journal, Vol. 45, No. 3, 2014, p. 752.
Acknowledgements
List of Contributors
List of Illustrations
Introduction. On the Early Modernity of Modern Memory .
Judith Pollmann and Erika Kuijpers
PART I â MEMORY POLITICS AND MEMORY WARS
1. The Usable Past in the Lemberg Armenian Communityâs Struggle for Equal Rights, 1578â1654
Alexandr Osipian
2. A Contested Past. Memory Wars during the Twelve Years Truce (1609â21)
Jasper van der Steen
3. âYou Will See Who They Are that Revile, and Lessen Your Glorious Deliveranceâ. The âMemory Warâ about the âGlorious Revolutionâ
Ulrich Niggemann
4. Civic and Confessional Memory in Conflict. Augsburg in the Sixteenth Century
Sean F. Dunwoody