A Quest for Communitas Rethinking Mediated Memory Existentially
Abstract
Despite the fragmentation of audience behaviour and the pluralization of platforms within the
media cultures of the digital age, cultural memory practices retain an important feature: They
echo a basic existential quest for
communitas
. The present article compares two seemingly
incomparable regimes of memory of our time: the anniversaries of 9.11 on Swedish television and web communities of commemoration of lost loved ones. It suggests through these contrasting examples that existential themes are pursued in the face of three challenges: the temporality of instantaneity, the all-pervasive networked individualism that makes memory
into a matter of elective affinities, and the technological capacities that subject memory to endless revision. The article explores the existential dimension of these memory practices in line with research within the culturalist emphasis on the study of media and religion. This debate recognizes the need for a broader understanding of the mediated qualities of religion and the religious qualities of the media. The article argues that both televisual anniversaries of trauma that invite audiences to an annual return, and our new multiple and fragmented media memories compel us to conceive of our hyper-contingent, late-modern digital age as a quest for meaning,
transcendence and cohesion – for what Victor Turner (1969) called existential communitas
Publisher
Nordic Council of Ministers, Nordicom
Citation
Nordicom Review. 35 Special issue. p. 205-218
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2014-08Author
Lagerqvist, Amanda
Editor
Hornmoen, Harald
Orgeret, Kristin Skare
Keywords
Digital age
Memory
Anniversary journalism
Web memorials
Publication type
article, peer reviewed scientific
ISBN
978-9186523-94-7
Language
eng