The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory

The means of storing and transmitting information are transforming funerary architecture and our relationship with death. Burial sites, which reflect social and religious hierarchies, have historically structured collective memory. Today, digital technologies —supported by new media— offer detailed...

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Main Author: Stefania Rasile
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ediciones ARQ 2024-12-01
Series:ARQ
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author Stefania Rasile
author_facet Stefania Rasile
author_sort Stefania Rasile
collection DOAJ
description The means of storing and transmitting information are transforming funerary architecture and our relationship with death. Burial sites, which reflect social and religious hierarchies, have historically structured collective memory. Today, digital technologies —supported by new media— offer detailed archives for perpetual remembrance. Human and artificial intelligence are reshaping the construction and organization of memory in response to the technological possibilities of our era. Yet, this shift presents a paradox: the more we can remember —or, more precisely, digitally retrieve— the easier it becomes to forget. As digital storage expands, the paradox deepens, and what should remain accessible risks being lost in a sea of boundless, transient data.
format Article
id doaj-art-9f3c8bf031ea46ca95531c8712b12c8f
institution OA Journals
issn 0716-0852
0717-6996
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Ediciones ARQ
record_format Article
series ARQ
spelling doaj-art-9f3c8bf031ea46ca95531c8712b12c8f2025-08-20T02:08:49ZengEdiciones ARQARQ0716-08520717-69962024-12-011183645http://dx.doi.org/10.4067/S0717-69962024000300036The Cemetery and Digital Collective MemoryStefania Rasile0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4548-9802Independent ResearcherThe means of storing and transmitting information are transforming funerary architecture and our relationship with death. Burial sites, which reflect social and religious hierarchies, have historically structured collective memory. Today, digital technologies —supported by new media— offer detailed archives for perpetual remembrance. Human and artificial intelligence are reshaping the construction and organization of memory in response to the technological possibilities of our era. Yet, this shift presents a paradox: the more we can remember —or, more precisely, digitally retrieve— the easier it becomes to forget. As digital storage expands, the paradox deepens, and what should remain accessible risks being lost in a sea of boundless, transient data.funerary architectureoptimizationarchitecturedesacralizationcollectivity + new mediabig dataarq
spellingShingle Stefania Rasile
The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory
ARQ
funerary architecture
optimization
architecture
desacralization
collectivity + new media
big data
arq
title The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory
title_full The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory
title_fullStr The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory
title_full_unstemmed The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory
title_short The Cemetery and Digital Collective Memory
title_sort cemetery and digital collective memory
topic funerary architecture
optimization
architecture
desacralization
collectivity + new media
big data
arq
work_keys_str_mv AT stefaniarasile thecemeteryanddigitalcollectivememory
AT stefaniarasile cemeteryanddigitalcollectivememory