Memory Restoration

There are two kinds of memory-restoration work: memory grave-robbing and memory excavation.
Both of these are a series of processes aimed at unearthing precious memories—memories that seem to have vanished, yet still cling to life—by quietly traversing the boundary between consciousness and the unconscious.
Memory Grave-Robbing
Memory grave-robbing is the attempt to revive memories for which no tangible evidence—such as records or descriptions depicting that time or period—exists. The credibility, substance, verification, or sources of the memories that are thus unearthed cannot be confirmed in any form.
Any follow-up work—whether embellishment, repair, or patchwork—performed on these grave-robbed memories must take into account that the perceived value of such memories may vary, depending on the cultural and psychological conditions and value systems at the time the work is carried out.
Having long waited until I became the most suitable person to perform such follow-up work, I finally took the first shovel in hand one day in 2019, and thus began the project.
Memory Excavation
This is the work of reviving memories that still hold the faintest breath of life, as well as those for which tangible evidence—such as records or descriptions depicting that time or period—does exist. The stories unearthed through this kind of excavation can, to a significant degree, be substantiated.
Although the follow-up work for these excavated memories, too, must consider the cultural and psychological conditions and values of the time the work is being done, the overall perspective and narrative should remain faithful to those of the time when the memories were originally formed.
Jul. 4, 2020
Korean version: https://deposo.tistory.com/pages/%EA%B8%B0%EC%96%B5-%EB%90%98%EC%82%B4%EB%A6%AC%EA%B8%B0
quite interesting
ReplyDeleteThanks for your interest!
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