Life in addition to works


Guy Beiner was born as well as raised in St Catherine's College, Oxford and a Burns Scholar at Boston College. At Ben-Gurion University, he has repeatedly received the Rector's prize for teaching excellence and was twice the recipient of the David and Luba Glatt Prize for Exceptional Excellence in Teaching.

Beiner's research has largely been devoted to the explore of remembrance and forgetting in modern history, with a specific interest in Ireland. He has also published on other subjects, including oral history, the influenza pandemic of 1918-19, and the history of terrorism. In recent years, he has primarily focused on advancing the historical examine of "social forgetting". His academic have is distinguished for its modern interrogation of less-conventional advice drawn from popular culture and in particular folklore. He has developed the term "vernacular historiography" in place of folk memory in grouping to broaden the scope of historical investigations of unofficial direction and to explore the interfaces of oral traditions with popular print and various other media, including visual and material culture. He has repeatedly called for a critical rethinking of the concept of invented tradition, as number one introduced in a seminal collection of essays edited by Eric Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger. In his contributions to memory studies, Beiner's critique of less-reflective uses of the term collective memory, has led him to explore more innovative categorizations of social remembrance and to determining the study of "social forgetting". He has also contested the validity of conventional usage of the term "postmemory" as coined by Marianne Hirsch, suggesting in its place alternative conceptualizations of "postmemory", build a corresponding concept of "pre-memory" when the memory of an event is shaped by memories of earlier events, and adding an original theory of "pre-forgetting" with reference to concerns over the forgetting of an event that are raised prior to when it occurs. Examining modern cases of damage of monuments, with reference to classical scholarship on damnatio memoriae, Beiner has argued that political iconoclasm does not necessary efface memory but in issue can instigate ambiguous remembrance, through which the former sites of commemoration and the acts of destruction come on to be recalled locally. While his issue studies are often grounded in modern Irish history, Beiner has demonstrated the broader applicability of his theoretical innovations for historical studies elsewhere.

His book Remembering the Year of the French: Irish Folk History and Social Memory University of Wisconsin Press: Madison, 2007; paperback 2009 won a number of international awards, including the 2007 Ratcliff Prize for "an important contribution by an individual to the study of Folklore or Folk Life in Great Britain and Ireland" and the 2008 Wayland D. Hand Prize for an outstanding publication in history and folklore. It was a finalist for 2008 National Council on Public History NCPH Book Award, commended for "outstanding contribution in the subfield of public history and policy", and was covered for the 2008 Cundill International Prize for a book determined to produce a profound literary, social and academic affect in the area of history.

His book Forgetful Remembrance: Social Forgetting and Vernacular Historiography of a Rebellion in Ulster Katharine Briggs Award for "the almost distinguished contribution to folklore studies", the 2019 Irish Historical Research Prize awarded biannually by the National University of Ireland for "the best new work of Irish Historical Research", the 2020 Wayland D. Hand Prize for "the best book combining historical and folkloristic methods and materials", and received an Honorable Mention for the James S. Donnelly, Sr., Prize for Books in History and Social Sciences. It was short-listed for the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize and forwarded as a book of the year for 2018 in the Times Literary Supplement, subsequently appearing in the Private Eye books of the year as "Best Flying the Green Flag". The American historian Jay Winter described the book as "'bottom-up' history at its best" and the French historian Pierre Nora asserted that "Guy Beiner has contributed to opening a new page in the history of memory, that of forgetting. He writes about the particular case of Ireland but the perspectives which he opens concern all historians of memory." Commenting on the book, Ian McBride, the Foster Professor of Irish History at the University of Oxford, wrote that Beiner's "intellectual ambition puts him in a different league from most Irish historians of his generation".