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Communities of Memory: On Identity, Memory, and Debt

W. James Booth

American Political Science Review, 1999, vol. 93, issue 2, 249-263

Abstract: I take up the question of political identity as the continuity of a community across time. In particular, I examine what it means to think of a political community as the subject of attribution across generations, that is, what is meant when it is made the bearer of responsibility for the past and a custodian of the future. In doing that, I focus on identity, memory, and responsibility and discuss that cluster of concepts using as an illustrative example the idea of constitutional patriotism and its relationship to the past.

Date: 1999
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