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Religion as memory: How has the continuity of tradition produced collective meanings? – Part one

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Author(s)
Jakub Urbaniak
Keywords
Memory
religion
Christianity
collective memory
memories
remembrances
tradition
continuity
post-modernity
postmodern crisis
fragmented
fragmentation
pluralism
decomposition
channels of the sacred
de-institutionalisation
Hervieu-Léger
Ricoe
The Bible
BS1-2970
Practical Theology
BV1-5099
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/18264
Online Access
https://doaj.org/article/49c795f3ef54404ba49ef7a8d70fdea9
Abstract
Danièle Hervieu-Léger gives an account of religion as a chain of memory, that is, a form of collective memory and imagination based on the sanctity of tradition. According to her theory, in the postmodern world the continuity of religious memory has been broken and all that remains are isolated fragments guarded by religious groups. This twofold study aims at showing, firstly, in what sense religion can be conceived of as memory which produces collective meanings (Part One) and, secondly, what may happen when individualised and absolutised memories alienate themselves from a continuity of tradition, thus beginning to function as a sort of private religion (Part Two). Being the first part of the study in question, this article is dedicated to a historical-theological analysis of religious memory as a source of collective meanings, as seen from a Christian perspective. Firstly, it situates Hervieu-Léger’s definition of religion against the background of the most topical religious contexts in which the notion of memory appears today. Secondly, the dialectics of individual and collective memory is discussed, notably through the lens of Ricoeur’s original proposal. This is followed by an overview of the traditional functions of memory in Christianity. Lastly, the interpretation of the way in which Christian tradition, in its premodern continuity, served as a source of collective cultural meanings, is recapitulated. What underlies this analysis is the conviction that to comprehend, and even more so to challenge mechanisms based on which the dominant purveyors of meaning (such as economic and information market) function in our day, one should have a clear understanding of what they attempt to substitute for. In brief, before exploring how memories become religion, one ought to be able to conceive of religion as memory.
Date
2015-03-01
Type
Article
Identifier
oai:doaj.org/article:49c795f3ef54404ba49ef7a8d70fdea9
0259-9422
2072-8050
10.4102/hts.v71i3.2815
https://doaj.org/article/49c795f3ef54404ba49ef7a8d70fdea9
Collections
HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies (HTS)

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