“奶奶有丈夫吗?”代际记忆与二十世纪女性的生活。

Sally Alexander
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引用次数: 11

摘要

本文用“思想的内在生活”这一古代和现代意义上的记忆来描述一个现代职业家庭中代际记忆的形成,这个家庭在20世纪的历史因移民、战争、教育和离婚而破碎。它是关于情感和法律的力量,它为二十世纪妇女的生活提供了实际的自由,并在普选和世界大战之后引入了现代公民。文章的第一部分强调了记忆形成过程中身体感觉和驱力的心理维度;一个被口述历史和社会运动所忽视的维度,却被自传和回忆录所证实。我孙女的问题引发了反抗和家庭故事,让我观察到一个孩子的思维过程。社会历史、自传和个人记忆证实了日常生活的共同经历,可以追溯到几代伦敦家庭;民间传说、商业和家庭故事构成了梦、希望、恐惧和事件的叙述;孩子对外部世界的理解是通过好奇心、想象力和游戏来掌握的,在这种情况下,身体的感觉与语言和禁令一样强大,可以在内心世界和外部现实之间产生意义。文章的后半部分反映了琼·里维埃对自我的描述。里维埃是英国著名的精神分析学家,弗洛伊德的翻译家,写作于20世纪50年代,他的内心世界语言与自由主义社会伦理——共情、公共服务、共同利益——产生共鸣,这些都是20世纪中期妇女和人权的基础,也是自20世纪70年代以来普遍主义受到挑战的平等主义和再生产改革的基础。消极情绪在里维埃对自我的描述中十分突出——恐惧、羞耻、震惊和创伤,这些在回忆录和自传中得到了证实。相反,自由社会民主主义对当时英国人性格的理想化描述。在未来不确定的今天,记忆——在古代和现代意义上的“思想之眼”——对社会运动和个人来说比以往任何时候都更加必要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"Do grandmas have husbands?" Generational memory and twentieth-century women's lives.

This essay uses memory in the ancient and modern sense of the "inner life of thought" to describe the formation of generational memory in a modern professional family whose twentieth-century history has been fractured by migration, war, education, and divorce. It is about the power of feeling and law, which framed the practical freedoms of twentieth-century women's lives and introduced the modern citizen in the aftermath of universal suffrage and world war. The first part of the essay emphasizes the psychic dimension of bodily feeling and drive in the formation of memory; a dimension overlooked by oral history and social movements, yet confirmed by autobiography and memoir. My granddaughter's questions provoked resistance as well as family stories, and let me observe the thought process in a child. Social history, autobiography, and personal memory confirm the common experience of everyday life reaching back through generations of London families; folklore, commerce, and family story make narratives of dreams, hopes, terrors, and events; a child's comprehension of the outside world is grasped through curiosity, imagination, and play in which bodily feeling is as powerful as speech and prohibition to make meanings that flow between inner world and external reality. The second half of the essay reflects on Joan Riviere's description of the self. Leading British psychoanalyst, translator of Freud, writing in the 1950s, Riviere's language of the inner world resonates with the liberal social ethics -- empathy, public service, common good -- which underpinned women's and human rights mid-twentieth century and the egalitarian and reproduction reforms whose universalism has been challenged since the 1970s. Negative feeling is striking in Riviere's description of the self -- fear, shame, shock, and trauma, which are confirmed in memoir and autobiography. In contrast, liberal social democratic accounts of the time idealized English character. Today, the future uncertain, memory -- in the ancient and modern sense of the "inner eye of thought" -- is more than ever necessary for social movements as for the individual.

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