raw.space

field/memory-as-collective-space

Memory as a collective space

On memory we call shared, and whose it actually is.

Memory feels like the most private thing a person owns, and most of it arrived from somewhere else. We inherit far more of it than we make: the stories told to us before we were old enough to doubt them, the rituals we keep without knowing their source, the dates that feel important, the statues we pass without quite reading. We live inside a shared memory the way we live inside a landscape, shaped by contours we did not choose and mostly cannot see.

Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.Chinua Achebe

So the word shared needs watching. A shared memory is not a neutral one, and it is not shared out evenly. Every society keeps some of its stories and buries the rest. A few are given the holidays and the monuments and the place in the textbook; the others are left to the margins, carried in whispers, or pressed down until their very absence comes to look like nature, like the plain shape of how things simply were. What a people calls its past is a selection somebody made. Who gets remembered out loud, and who is quietly required to forget, is a question of power before it is anything else.

Which is why a fight over memory is never only about the past. It runs underneath the arguments over which monuments stand and which come down, over what the schools are allowed to teach, over a language taught again to children after a century in which speaking it was punished, over a buried truth and whether it will be said at all. To contest the memory is to contest who belongs, and so to contest what the future is permitted to become.

Memory is a mirror that scandalises its owner.Eduardo Galeano

And memory can be taken back. People gather up what was meant to be lost, set down the stories that never reached the record, teach the forbidden tongue, dig up the thing someone took such care to bury. It is easy to file this under heritage, something gentle and faintly sentimental, and to miss what it really is: the lions beginning to keep their own account of the hunt. It changes what the collective is, because the collective was never the settled, common thing it claimed to be.

So memory is a collective space, truly, but not a commons that everyone holds in equal measure. It is contested ground, and on it someone is always deciding, partly on your behalf, what will be kept and what allowed to fall away. Forgetting is a choice, not weather that simply arrives, and so is remembering, and both are usually being made by someone with an interest in how they turn out. The honest relation to a shared past is to keep asking whose it is, and to keep the asking open, rather than to settle into it as though it were finished.