I work on memory and forgetting and how the relation between the two appears in the history of philosophy; my curiosity is motivated by their effects on identity and contemporary social and political life. Writing, as a form, is also important to me — it has always been the way in which I relate to others. In a parallel life, I’m an editor at the.
The core of my academic work at 鶹ýɫƬ consists of a critical examination of Nietzsche’s account of forgetting and memory with reference to his philosophical foil — a conception of memory that begins with Plato’s distinction between memory and recollection, which is later critically reevaluated by Aristotle. Memory is afforded tremendous explanatory power in modernity as its driving force. We think of memory as both a personal and collective resource that is our conduit to the past; as such, it is the crux on which our self-understanding turns. Memory’s description in philosophical history is dominated by static, preservationist metaphors (for example, Plato’s wax tablet and aviary, Augustine’s “treasure-hall,” Locke’s “storehouse,” and Hegel’s “pit”) and the tendency to identify its telos as an overcoming of forgetfulness — memory is truth and being, while forgetfulness is death and oblivion.
Nietzschean memory, however, is a “poisoned-cure.” It is necessary for being human — for promising, forgiving, friendship, and love. Yet it is also a burden, preventing the renewal of things long gone stale in experiential repetition or historical storage. Nietzsche shows how forgetting is blotted out by Mnemosyne’s long shadow over our most importunate concerns — morality, history, and death. Forgetting, for Nietzsche, is not inert — a mere lack or absence of memory — but an active force necessary for conceptual thinking, agency, and happiness. As an agonistic counterpoint to memory, what is active, Nietzschean forgetting, and how do we cultivate it? The Onassis Foundation Doctoral Fellowship is ideal for my ongoing research and provides crucial support for the remainder of my PhD work.