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ID101169
Title ProperBeyond the war
Other Title Informationthe Lebanese postmemory experience
LanguageENG
AuthorLarkin, Craig
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article seeks to address how Lebanese youth are dealing with the legacy of civil war (1975-90), given the national backdrop of official silence, persisting injustice, and competing memory discourses. Drawing on Marianne Hirsch's concept of postmemory, it explores the memory of a generation of Lebanese who have grown up dominated not by traumatic events but by narrative accounts of events that preceded their birth. This residual form of memory carries and connects with the pain of others, suffusing temporal frames and liminal positions. The article examines how postmemory is mediated and transformed through the mnemonic lenses of visual landscapes and oral narratives. Consideration is given to the dynamic production of "memoryscapes"-memories of violence localized in particular sites-and to narrative constructions of the past implicated in the ongoing search for meaning, historical truth, and identity. This article seeks to challenge pervasive notions of Lebanese postwar amnesia and of a generational detachment from the residual effects and future implications of war recollections.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 42, No. 4; Nov 2010: p615-635
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 42, No. 4; Nov 2010: p615-635
Key WordsWar ;  Lebanese ;  Postmemory ;  Invisible War