6533b7cffe1ef96bd1259078

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Narrativity and intertextuality in the making of a shared European memory

LähdesmäkiTuuli

subject

Cultural StudiesnarrativeSociology and Political Science050109 social psychologyPerformative utteranceExhibitionintertekstuaalisuusEuropean integrationNarrative structure050602 political science & public administrationmedia_common.cataloged_instanceta6160501 psychology and cognitive sciencesNarrativeSociologyEuropean UnionEuropean unionIntertextualitymedia_common05 social sciencesNarrativityMedia studies0506 political scienceintertextualityParlamentariumLawPolitical Science and International RelationsEuropean memory

description

The latest wave of European integration process, cultural Europeanization, includes complex processes, such as the attempts to create a shared European memory that would transcend national interpretations of the past. The cultural Europeanization can be perceived as a narrative operation: in it the EU, Europe, and Europeanness are given meanings and made sense of through narrativization. The article investigates the EU’s attempts to create a shared European memory by analyzing the exhibition narrative of the Parlamentarium, the visitors’ center of the European Parliament. The analysis indicates how the construction of an official shared European memory is operationalized through textual and narrative devices such as intertextuality and the pending narrative structure. I argue that the EU’s memory texts are performative narratives which do not only describe a shared European memory in a particular way but also position the receivers as active agents in the story of the EU–Europe and invite them to produce it on their own initiative. peerReviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201702021347