6 May 2019

New Publication: Historical Dialogues and Collective Memory Work

Sara Dybris McQuaid has written an article together with Henrik Sonne Petersen from Danmission and Johnston Price from Five Decades Project at Forspring on historical dialogues at the intersection between memory studies and peacebuilding.

The article offers a semistructured conversation between an academic and two practioners. The conversation aims at identifying and observing potential entry points for analysis and practice in conflict transformation whilst also discussing how historical dialogues themselves are framed as open and exploratory or principled and tied to preconditions.

The first conversation is between an academic and a practitioner engaged directly in historical dialogues through a storytelling project in Northern Ireland. They bring together theoretical, practical, and methodological considerations of moving between levels of memory as well as understanding historical dialogues at once as processes and products. The second conversation is with a practitioner who works with peacebuilding and dialogue, but not yet from an explicit entry point of historical dialogue. This conversation explores the role of religion and religious practice as powerful institutions and instruments in bridging individual and collective memory, as well as challenging community cohesion. As such, the article deals with historical dialogues that bring the past into the present, i.e. storytelling projects (the first conversation), or upon which memory work may be brought to bear, i.e. reading preventive dialogues also as historical dialogues (second conversation). The chapter concludes with a brief discussion of how memory work can become part of peacebuilding practices.