About Us:
Our group approaches the memory of collective violence as social, cultural, and communicative practice. Memory is treated as an activity, in need of attention and analysis, which produces and disseminates knowledge about the past and promotes values.
We are a group of interdisciplinary scholars, representing sociolinguistics, history, psychology, media and communication studies, political science, performing arts, literary studies, and sociology, who study how memory of collective violence is practiced. We examine concrete localized contexts such as educational programs, visits to museums and sites of destruction, reading groups, and social media platforms.
We are concerned with describing the on the ground work of interpretation and interaction in which the memory of collective violence is performed. We investigate how persons interact with the social, material, and technological spaces where memory of collective violence is formed, the affordances for social action that such spaces enable or constrain, how meanings circulate intertextually, and their consequences and effects beyond mnemonic meanings per se.
We are concerned with describing the actual, on the ground work of interpretation and interaction, in which the memory of collective violence is performed. We investigate how persons interact with the social, material, and technological spaces where the memory of collective violence is formed, the affordances for social inter/action that such spaces enable or constrain, how meanings circulate intertextually, and their consequences and effects beyond mnemonic meanings per se.
Alexandra Georgakopoulou
Key aspects of activity
Selected Publications (2024-2025):
Georgakopoulou, A. (2024a) Reconfiguring and repurposing authenticity: Influencers and formatted stories on Instagram during the pandemic. In P. Blitvich & Georgakopoulou, A. (eds.). Influencer discourse. Affective relations and identities. John Benjamins. 20-42.
Georgakopoulou, A. (2024b) In search of context online: Technography as a synergetic methodology for the study of stories. Discourse, Context & Media 61. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcm.2024.100801
Georgakopoulou, A. (in press) From ‘being real’ to ‘relatable tales’: Formatted authenticity and stories in TikTok short form videos. Narrative Works.
Hanna Meretoja
Key aspects of activity
Selected Publications (2024 - 2025)
Meretoja, Hanna: “On Rereading: Revisiting Jonathan Littell’s The Kindly Ones”. – Colin Davis (ed), Hermeneutics, Ethics, Narrative. Oslo: Novus, 2025, pp. 129-145.
Meretoja, Hanna: “Literature as an Exploration of Past Worlds as Spaces of Possibility: Herta Müller’s Atemschaukel (The Hunger Angel).” – Eneken Laanes et al. (eds), Mnemonic Migration. Berlin and New York: De Gruyter, 2025.
Meretoja, Hanna: “History of Experience, Implicit Narratives, and a Sense of the Possible.” Cultural History 2024 (Online Supplement), 52–73. https://doi.org/10.3366/cult.2024.0319
Chaim Noy
Key aspects of activity
Selected Publications:
Schreiber, Mia, and Chaim Noy (in press). Google Maps Review sub-platform: A narrative view of design, affordances, and user activity. New Media & Society.
Noy, Chaim (2021). “Narrative affordances: Audience participation in museum narration in two history museums.” Narrative Inquiry, 31(2): 287-310. https://doi.org/10.1075/ni.19121.noy
Noy, Chaim (2018). “Memory, Media, and Museum Audience’s Discourse of Remembering.” Critical Discourse Studies, 15(1): 19-38. DOI:10.1080/17405904.2017.1392331
Constance Pâris de Bollardière
Key aspects of activity
Selected Publications:
Pâris de Bollardière, C. (2024), Writings of Destruction and Reconstruction in the Polish-Jewish Diaspora: The Case of Yankev Pat, In geveb. A Journal of Yiddish Studies, online, https://ingeveb.org/pedagogy/yankev-pat
Pâris de Bollardière C. and Kangisser Cohen S., eds., (2023), After the Darkness? Holocaust Survivors’ Emotional, Psychological and Social Journeys in the Early Postwar Period, Jerusalem, Yad Vashem.
Scientific editor (2022) of Marek Edelman, Ghetto de Varsovie. Carnets retrouvés, Paris, Odile Jacob.
Per Roar
Key aspects of activity
Brian Schiff
Key aspects of activity:
Selected Publications:
Schiff, B. (2023). Memory is an interpretive action. Narrative Inquiry. 33(2), 269-287.
Schiff, B. (2025). Talk about the past. Memory Studies. 18. 676-687.
Schiff, B. (In press). Reconsidering collective memory: Shared meaning as collaborative narration. In A. Erll & W. Hirst (Eds.). Breaking down the silos: Memory between cognition, culture, and political momentum.
Thomas Van de Putte
Key aspects of activity
Selected Publications:
Van de Putte, T. (2024) Outsourcing the European Past. An Interscalar Study of Memory and Morality. London: Palgrave Macmillan.
Van de Putte, T. (2021) Contemporary Auschwitz/Oswiecim: a synchronic, interactional approach to collective memory. London: Routledge.
(Under contract) Van de Putte, T. Historical distance and the Holocaust. A study of interactions between historians and middle-class Western Europeans in memory education. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
Timothy Williams
Key aspects of activity
Selected Publications:
Timothy Williams. 2025. Memory Politics after Mass Violence. Attributing Roles in the Memoryscape. Bristol: Bristol University Press.
Johanna Mannergren, Annika Björkdahl, Susanne Buckley-Zistel, Stefanie Kappler, and Timothy Williams. 2024. Peace and the Politics of Memory. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Timothy Williams. 2025. “Remembering perpetrators, victims and heroes: the mnemonic legacy of violence.” Security Studies 34 (2): 360-391.
Willa Rae Witherow-Culpepper and Timothy Williams. 2025. “Learning about and from the Holocaust? On the limits of Holocaust education as civic education.” Holocaust Studies.