Sports sites of memory in Japan's cultures of remembrance and oblivion: collective remembrance is like swimming - in order to stay afloat you have to keep moving

TitleSports sites of memory in Japan's cultures of remembrance and oblivion: collective remembrance is like swimming - in order to stay afloat you have to keep moving
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsWolfram Manzenreiter, John Horne
JournalSport in Society
Volume14
Issue4
Pagination542-552
ISSN17430437
Abstract

We have been asked to provide a summarizing article on the role of sports in memorizing the Japanese nation. Each of the three dimensions of memory evoked and revealed in the studies that are contained in this issue demonstrate the promise of, and purchase that, a focus on sport and lieu de memoire provides to scholars of sport and Japanese society. We draw a tentative conclusion that the articles in this issue demonstrate that historical studies of sports can open a window onto the topology of Japanese symbolism. Amongst the questions we need to continue to ask are to what degree pre-modern societies have actually shared and nourished the 'living memory', the loss of which has been bemoaned by Nora. Also we must take issue with the notion of 'collective memory' as an absolute, all-encompassing, entity, since it is important to consider opportunities for the investigation of counter-memory and counter-memorialization.

DOI10.1080/17430437.2011.565933
Short TitleSports sites of memory in Japan's cultures of remembrance and oblivion