About This Book
A sequence of essays and reported conversations explores how women's recollections reshape personal and social life. Memory is shown to soften and transmute hardship into consoling narrative while simultaneously selecting and amplifying experiences that unsettle conventions, inform labor and community relations, and oppose the pressures of war. Drawing on community encounters and wartime observations, the work traces memory's dual function of comforting individuals and gradually assembling collective norms, and ends with a reflective account of interpretative memory as a practical guide for understanding experience and prompting reform.
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