Disruption of Consolidation, digital original edition: A BIT of Individual and Collective Memory ConsolidationThe authors of Individual and Collective Memory Consolidation propose that that individuals and collectives form memories by analogous processes. This BIT examines the collective retrograde amnesia in mainland Chinese populations that experienced the Cultural Revolution and discusses the persistence of consolidated collective memory despite traumatic disruption. |
Contents
CollectiveRetrograde Amnesia | |
Persistence of Consolidated Collective Memory The Traumas Effecton Confucianism The Persistence of Memory for Confucianism in Government | |
Conclusions | |
Common terms and phrases
already consolidated Analects andthe anterograde amnesia Buddhist buffer bythe CCP’s Chāng chapter China Chinese collective memory Chinese literature collective consolidation collective levels collective memory consolidation collective memory formation collective retrograde amnesia Communist movements Confucianism consolidation process Cultural Revolution Daoist declarative memory disrupted duringthe Dynasty establishment false memories foreordination fromthe Héshùn historians human nature imperial inChina individual memory influence inthe KMT government literary longterm mainland Chinese society Máo Marxism memory items Míng Dynasty modern Chinese literature narrative non nonCommunist nonmainland Northern Thailand KMT October Revolution ofcollective ofthe onthe people’s persisted political pretrauma period reconsolidation relater relationships religious meaning remembering entity remote rituals rootseeking Shànghǎi sinologist social hippocampus social trauma Soviet specific stable collective memory stable memory Stakhanov Stakhanovite Stalin story Sūn Táiwān Chinese Táiwānese temples Thailand KMT villagers theCCP theChinese theKMT Thinking Generation’s memory tothe traditional Chinese culture U.S. Congress wellknown withthe Yáng