Family, Memory, and Identity: An Introduction

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Abstract

This article introduces a special issue on “family, memory, and identity.” Beginning with a survey of previous research in this area, especially exploring family as a site for collective memory, and the ways that family memory work shapes national histories, it introduces the contribution made by this special issue to our understanding of how family memory and national memory intertwine in the production of individual identity. Highlighting the key findings of the special issue, it particularly notes how family history research has the potential to challenge and reform national memory, and in doing so allows for rich and complex rethinkings of the past for both historians and members of the public.

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APA

Barclay, K., & Koefoed, N. J. (2021). Family, Memory, and Identity: An Introduction. Journal of Family History, 46(1), 3–12. https://doi.org/10.1177/0363199020967297

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