Menacing, nerve-racking, uncomfortably intrusive, the high school reunion has become a dreaded encounter with
past and present for many Americans. It is a moment of both heightened self-awareness and public presentation,
insisting that we account for ourselves, not merely to our own satisfaction, but to the satisfaction of others
as well. For sociologist Vinitzky-Seroussi, the high school reunion presents an ideal forum in which to explore
the ongoing construction of identity in American society, and, perhaps, to ascertain just how we have managed to
make sense of our lives, from then to now.
As autobiographical occasions, reunions prompt us to examine our own life narratives, the stories we tell ourselves
about who we are and how we have come to be that person. But at the same time, they can threaten the integrity
of those very stories, subjecting them to the scrutiny of others whose memories of the past and ourselves may be
altogether different from our own. Reunions, then, engender a fragile community held together by the resources
of a shared past, yet imperiled by the tensions of competing histories. Inevitably--for both those who attend and
those who choose not to--the reunion forces a kind of biographical confrontation, an unavoidable and often pivotal
engagement between a carefully constructed personal identity and the socially prevalent standards of success and
accomplishment.
Though many see in today's culture the gradual demise of personal identity, Vinitzky-Seroussi's carefully researched
study reveals something quite different-- After Pomp and Circumstance explores a struggle we all experience:
the desire to resolve the tension between public conceptions and internal understandings, to maintain a sense of
continuity between past and present lives, and to lay claim to both an integrated self and a unified life history.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1: The Research Site and the Attendees
2: Community, Continuity, and the One-Night Stand
3: Reunions as Social Control
4: Autobiography as a Social Endeavor
5: A Memory of a Collective
6: Encountering a Personal Past
7: Managing Discontinuity
8: Between Situated Identity and Personal Identity
Conclusion: Reunions and Beyond
Appendix
Notes
References
Index