Many people deploy photo media tools to document everyday events and
rituals. For generations we have stored memories in albums, diaries, and
shoeboxes to retrieve at a later moment in life. Autobiographical
memory, its tools, and its objects are pressing concerns in most
people's everyday lives, and recent digital transformation cause many to
reflect on the value and meaning of their own "mediated memories."
Digital photo cameras, camcorders, and multimedia computers are rapidly
replacing analogue equipment, inevitably changing our everyday routines
and conventional forms of recollection. How will digital photographs,
lifelogs, photoblogs, webcams, or playlists change our personal
remembrance of things past? And how will they affect our cultural
memory? The main focus of this study is the ways in which (old and new)
media technologies shape acts of memory and individual remembrances.
This book spotlights familiar objects but addresses the larger issues of
how technology penetrates our intimate routines and emotive processes,
how it affects the relationship between private and public, memory and
experience, self and others.