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Cabinet 42: Forgetting Wayne Koestenbaum
Cabinet 42: Forgetting
Wayne Koestenbaum
Across fields as disparate as historiography, psychiatry and anthropology, remembering was long considered primary and forgetting simply a malfunction of recall. But after figures such as Nietzsche and Freud, the act of forgetting has undergone a wholesale reevaluation; for many modern thinkers, active forgetting is the precondition for living. Cabinet issue 42 features Jennifer J. Almontez on Greek orators' mnemonic system of creating vast "memory palaces"; Chip Chapman on forgetting and the creation of national myths; Sophia Hall on animal memory and obedience training methods; an interview with Jean-Yves Le Naour on the story of Anthelme Mangin, France's best-known WWI amnesiac; and a portfolio featuring artist-designed monuments to forgetting. Elsewhere in the issue: Brigid Doherty on British analyst Wilfred Bion's notation for the unknown; Allen S. Weiss on the dance macabre; Erica Owen on the relationship between nineteenth-century racial theories and the creation of the modern valuation system for "precious" and "semi-precious" stones; and much more.
| Media | Books Paperback Book (Book with soft cover and glued back) |
| Released | September 30, 2011 |
| ISBN13 | 9781932698411 |
| Publishers | Cabinet |
| Pages | 112 |
| Dimensions | 203 × 8 × 254 mm · 340 g |
| Language | English |
| Contributor | Sina Najafi |
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