Aleida Assmann
Aleida Assmann (born 22 March 1947) is a German professor emerita of English literature and literary studies at the University of Konstanz, specializing in cultural memory and its role in literature and society.[1][2]
Assmann studied English literature and Egyptology at the universities of Heidelberg and Tübingen, earning her doctorate from Heidelberg in 1977 with a thesis on the legitimation of fiction in literary theory, followed by her habilitation there in 1992.[3][4] She joined the University of Konstanz in 1993 as full professor, retiring in 2014, during which time she advanced interdisciplinary research on memory's functions in Western civilization through media and archives.[2][5]
Her seminal contributions include theorizing cultural memory as a long-term, institutionalized repository distinct from short-term communicative memory, emphasizing the tension between canonical traditions that actively shape identity and archival potentials that store unused cultural heritage for future reactivation.[6][7] This framework, developed in works like Cultural Memory and Western Civilization (2011), has influenced memory studies by highlighting how societies selectively preserve and retrieve the past via texts, monuments, and institutions.[8] Married to Egyptologist Jan Assmann since 1971, she has collaborated with him on collective memory projects, earning joint awards such as the 2017 Balzan Prize and the 2018 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade for advancing understanding of how memory fosters social cohesion and reconciliation.[1][7][5]