New Memory Cultures and Death: Existential Security in the Digital Memory Ecology

Authors

  • Amanda Lagerkvist Stockholm University

Abstract

It is often claimed that modern media massively return the repressed yet unavoidable fact of death, which modernity had institutionalised and placed out of sight. Death is everywhere in the media age: in news, in fiction, and not least in the budding practices of sociality and memory on the internet. This article will revolve around what we may learn about media and death from the vantage point of how memory cultures are currently being transformed. Spanning a heterogeneous terrain, the ‘digital memory ecology’ comprises among other things the construction of a digital afterlife, commemorative communities of grief and remembrance, interaction in guest books, digital candles and commentary fields on digital memorials. This article argues that today death is far from the hidden supplement to culture as Zygmunt Bauman contends or that it is even making a mediated return to us, but is rather ubiquitous in the digital age. As such it is both de-sequestered and deferred. By launching the deliberately ambiguous concept of existential security, the article outlines a research agenda for how we may approach these tendencies.

Author Biography

Amanda Lagerkvist, Stockholm University

Amanda Lagerkvist is an Associate Professor of Media and Communication Studies, and Wallenberg Academy Fellow at the Department of Media Studies, Stockholm University. Having worked in a project financed by the Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation, the ‘Times of Television’, focusing on and the existential dimensions of anniversary journalism and televisual commemoration in Sweden (2010–2013), she is now setting out on a five year project financed by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation: “Existential Terrains: Memory and Meaning in Cultures of Connectivity” (2014–2018). She has published numerous articles on mediation, space and memory, and is the author of Media and Memory in New Shanghai: Western Performances of Futures Past (published by Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies, 2013) as well as the co-editor of Strange Spaces: Explorations into Mediated Obscurity (published by Ashgate, 2009).

Downloads

Published

2023-08-09