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Memory and Fragility: Art's Resistance to Oblivion (Three Colombian Cases)

Through Colombian art, spirit surpasses a notion of history and memory related to the past in terms of accumulation, conservation, and classification. Art, Hegel insists, opens the gates of remembrance (Erinnerung): it is the event that actively transforms facts into a living past to keep them from...

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Published in:CR (East Lansing, Mich.) Mich.), 2014-04, Vol.14 (1), p.71-98
Main Author: Acosta López, María del Rosario
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Language:English
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description Through Colombian art, spirit surpasses a notion of history and memory related to the past in terms of accumulation, conservation, and classification. Art, Hegel insists, opens the gates of remembrance (Erinnerung): it is the event that actively transforms facts into a living past to keep them from becoming soulless carcasses.
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source Project Muse:Jisc Collections:Project MUSE Journals Agreement 2024:Premium Collection; JSTOR Archival Journals
subjects Abstract art
Art history
Art objects
Artistic representation
Cultural history
Forgiveness
History
History instruction
Memory
Memory trace
Special Section: Writing/Violence/Latin America
Spirituality
Visual arts
title Memory and Fragility: Art's Resistance to Oblivion (Three Colombian Cases)
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