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Original Articles

Cultural and communicative memories: contrasting Argentina’s 1976 coup d’état and the 2001 economic-political-social crisis

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Pages 974-984 | Received 26 Jun 2017, Accepted 15 Jan 2018, Published online: 31 Jan 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Studies on collective memory have recently addressed the distinction between cultural and communicative memory as a way to understand how the source of a memory affects its structure or form. When a groups’ memory is mediated by memorials, documentaries or any other cultural artifacts, collective memory is shaped by cultural memory. When it is based mostly in communication with other people, its source is communicative memory. We address this distinction by studying two recent events in Argentinean history: the 2001 economic-political-social crisis (communicative memory) and the 1976 coup (cultural memory). We also examine the political ideology and the type of memory involved in collective memory. The memory of the studied events may occur during the lifetime of the rememberer (Lived Memory) or refer to distant events (Distant Memory). 100 participants responded to a Free Recall task about the events of 2001 in Argentina. Narrative analysis allowed comparing these recalls with our 1976 study. Results show: 1) Cultural memories are more contextualised, more impersonal and less affective. 2) Communicative memories are more personal and affective. Study shows how collective memory form changes when it has a different prevalent source.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 We also asked participants for their political engagement in the present and if they had been affected by the 2001 crisis. These factors did not affect any of the results and hence we do not report them here.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by PIP-CONICET [grant number 2015/2107].

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