‘Building on a lifetime of work, James Liu presents a penetrating exploration of the ways in which collective memories serve as symbolic resources for understanding and interpreting the complex world we live in. He carefully and insightfully demonstrates how the study of collective memory can help us understand the more perplexing crises of our day. A must-read for any student of collective memory, or, indeed, for anyone interested in history and politics.’ William Hirst, Malcolm B. Smith Professor of Psychology, The New School for Social Research, USA
‘‘Memory is at once a language and a map, a reflector of and guide for the present’ (Schwartz, 1996). James Liu’s book presents a comprehensive overview of research on collective remembering, brilliantly bridging bottom-up (psychological) and top-down (societal) approaches. In the process, he offers nothing less than a theory of political culture and social change, which he applies to three case studies: China-US relations, colonization and decolonization processes, and the COVID-19 pandemic.’ Laurent Licata, Professor of Social and Cultural Psychology, Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
‘This book is an example of a social psychology with a humanistic face mixed with quantitative methodologies. In a brilliant tour de force, philosophers like Baskhar dialogue dialectically with thinkers like Moscovici, Assman, and Nora. It examines the content and functions of collective memory, based on a research program on the social representations of history, combining statistical analysis with dense descriptions of collective memory cases from America, Asia, and Africa.’ Dario Paez, Professor of Social Psychology, Basque Country University, Spain
‘This is an outstanding volume. Liu has spent a lifetime investigating issues in collective memory, and he provides a rich discussion of both his own work and that of other leading scholars. He relates his studies on how people remember history across many countries to politics, showing how they mutually influence one another. Any student of collective memory or politics will learn much from this book. I highly recommend it.’ Henry L. Roediger III, James S. McDonnell Distinguished Professor, Washington University, USA
‘What a thought-provoking and timely volume! James Liu takes a bird’s-eye view of the study of collective memory in diverse approaches and disciplines. His critical analysis of cases and data across many nations demonstrates that collective remembering, whether authored by institutions or individuals, is a motivated act deeply conditioned by cultural factors while shaping political culture through connecting the past, present, and future.’ Qi Wang, author of The Autobiographical Self in Time and Culture
‘This is a major contribution to memory studies. In addition to laying out a cutting-edge conceptual framework for the study of collective memory, Liu draws on extensive data sets to provide sophisticated interpretations of several real-world memory projects. It will be a major resource for scholars and policy analysts for years to come.’ James V. Wertsch, David R. Francis Distinguished Professor, Washington University, USA, and author of How Nations Remember: A Narrative Approach