RESPONSIBILITY MEMORY
Abstract * A conceptual tool for reading writing, dwelling and inherited objects as ethical sites where memory becomes care, obligation and accountability toward what remains. Keywords * Socioplastics AntoLloveras LAPIEZA-LAB Responsibility Memory ResponsibilityMemory InheritedObjects dwelling archive care - Essay * ResponsibilityMemory links writing with dwelling—the room, the desk, the inheritance of objects as sites of ethical obligation. Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own is not merely about space but about the material conditions for thought: a lock, an income, a table, a door that closes. Memory is not spontaneous; it requires furniture—the drawer, the shelf, the cupboard where letters are kept. Gaston Bachelard’s poetics of space shows that the house is a topology of intimate recesses—corners, attics, cellars—each holding layered time, each demanding a specific attention. Walter Benjamin’s Arcades Project is an archaeology of the nineteenth century’s dreamworld, but also a method: the collector, the flâneur, the hoarder of citations takes responsibility for fragments that official history discards. Yet responsibility to memory is not benign. Ann Stoler’s along the archival grain shows that archives are not neutral repositories but sites of colonial violence; to be responsible to memory means reading for what the archive tried to destroy, for the mis-filed complaint, for the bureaucratic euphemism that covers torture. Sara Ahmed’s unhappy archives traces how institutions keep records of grievances as a technique of dismissal—the complaint becomes a file that goes nowhere. Ontologically, ResponsibilityMemory posits that writing is a form of dwelling, and dwelling is a form of care for the dead. Methodologically, it requires personal archive ethnography and critical inventory: the researcher must touch the paper, smell the attic, decide what to keep and what to let go. Empirical fields include literary estates, university grievance files, family letters, Holocaust testimonies, and institutional archives of abuse. The proposal is to practice slow inscription: to resist digital ephemerality by maintaining the physical trace, to take responsibility for the letter that arrives too late, and to refuse the demand to move on. ResponsibilityMemory counters FutureTemporality’s forward thrust with an ethics of inheritance: we do not only build the future; we answer for the past.