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collective memory

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English

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Noun

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collective memory (plural collective memories)

  1. (sociology) A shared pool of information held in the memories of multiple members of a group.
    Coordinate term: institutional memory
    • 2001 October 27, Sarah Boxer, “A Memorial Is Itself A Shaper Of Memory”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      Is it important, or even possible, for people to remember the events of Sept. 11 as they happened? Or is it more important for a society to concentrate on collective memory?
    • 2006 March 5, Holland Cotter, “The Collective Conscious”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
      At the same time it vividly evokes the almost preposterous horror of war itself, which Mr. [Walid] Raad experiences both first hand and from a distance, and has evoked as semifictional collective memory.
    • 2020 February 11, Russell Cobb, “Shifting Collective Memory in Tulsa”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN:
      The shift in the collective memory is also taking place in local schools, where some teachers still refuse to teach lessons on 1921.

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