
Remembering Hope
The Cultural Afterlife of Protest
Ann Rigney(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Will be published approx. on 10. January 2026
Book
Hardback
312 pages
978-0-19-778971-1 (ISBN)
Description
This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read on the Oxford Academic platform and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations.
How are social movements remembered and how does that memory impact later mobilizations? Does the memory of earlier defeats inspire or inhibit civil resistance? How does forgetting figure in these dynamics?
In Remembering Hope, Ann Rigney examines the role of storytelling in transferring hope in social transformation from one generation of activists to another. She uses the tools of cultural memory studies to explain how shared narratives about protest are produced using words, images, video, and performance. Referring to a wide range of cultural forms--periodicals, documentaries, archives, photography, but also graffiti and calendars--Rigney argues that storytelling itself intervenes in the present by mobilizing the power of cultural expression to reconnect with the aspirations and energies of predecessors. The changing memory of the Paris Commune is used as a red thread to tie together case studies, ranging from nineteenth-century socialists and anarchists to the Occupy movements of the 2010s and contemporary climate activism, and bring to light both continuities and transformations over time.
Rigney's long-term approach shows that cultural memory and activism are deeply entwined across generations, that protest survives in memory even when the streets are emptied, and that culturally mediated stories provide a resource for activists in articulating new agendas. It reveals how cultural memory work has been used as a form of resistance to historical outcomes and as a tool for kick-starting older campaigns in new contexts. Above all, by demonstrating the cultural transmission of hope, it challenges the assumption that grievance rather than active citizenship has always been at the heart of collective memory.
How are social movements remembered and how does that memory impact later mobilizations? Does the memory of earlier defeats inspire or inhibit civil resistance? How does forgetting figure in these dynamics?
In Remembering Hope, Ann Rigney examines the role of storytelling in transferring hope in social transformation from one generation of activists to another. She uses the tools of cultural memory studies to explain how shared narratives about protest are produced using words, images, video, and performance. Referring to a wide range of cultural forms--periodicals, documentaries, archives, photography, but also graffiti and calendars--Rigney argues that storytelling itself intervenes in the present by mobilizing the power of cultural expression to reconnect with the aspirations and energies of predecessors. The changing memory of the Paris Commune is used as a red thread to tie together case studies, ranging from nineteenth-century socialists and anarchists to the Occupy movements of the 2010s and contemporary climate activism, and bring to light both continuities and transformations over time.
Rigney's long-term approach shows that cultural memory and activism are deeply entwined across generations, that protest survives in memory even when the streets are emptied, and that culturally mediated stories provide a resource for activists in articulating new agendas. It reveals how cultural memory work has been used as a form of resistance to historical outcomes and as a tool for kick-starting older campaigns in new contexts. Above all, by demonstrating the cultural transmission of hope, it challenges the assumption that grievance rather than active citizenship has always been at the heart of collective memory.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 165 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
612 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-778971-1 (9780197789711)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Ann Rigney is emeritus Professor of Comparative Literature at Utrecht University, the Netherlands, and founder of the Utrecht Forum for Memory Studies. She has published widely on theories of cultural memory and on memory cultures from the nineteenth century to the present, including The Afterlives of Walter Scott (Oxford, 2012) and The Visual Memory of Protest (co-edited with T. Smits; 2023). In the period 2019-2024, she was recipient of a European Research Council Advanced Grant for the project Remembering Activism (ReAct).
Author
Emeritus Professor of Comparative LiteratureEmeritus Professor of Comparative Literature, Utrecht University
Content
Preface
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Chapter 1: Memory in Activism: The Commonweal, 1885-1894
Chapter 2: Marking Time with Radical Calendars
Chapter 3: Mediations of Outrage: Remembering as Non-Violent Resistance
Chapter 4: The Agency of the Aesthetic: Keeping the Commune Alive
Chapter 5: Toppling Monuments: End or Means?
Chapter 6: Activist Archiving as Prefigurative Practice
Chapter 7: Memory Work in Climate Activism
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Chapter 1: Memory in Activism: The Commonweal, 1885-1894
Chapter 2: Marking Time with Radical Calendars
Chapter 3: Mediations of Outrage: Remembering as Non-Violent Resistance
Chapter 4: The Agency of the Aesthetic: Keeping the Commune Alive
Chapter 5: Toppling Monuments: End or Means?
Chapter 6: Activist Archiving as Prefigurative Practice
Chapter 7: Memory Work in Climate Activism
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index