ABSTRACT

This collection of original essays brings together museum, theatre, and performance case studies with a focus on their distinctive and overlapping modes of producing memory for transnational audiences.

Whether this is through narrative, object, embodied encounter or a combination of the three, this volume considers distinctions and interactions between memory and history specifically through the lenses of theatre and performance studies, visual culture, and museum and curator studies. This book is underpinned by three areas of research enquiry: How are contemporary theatre makers and museum curators staging historical narratives of difficult pasts? How might comparisons between theatre and museum practices offer new insights into the role objects play in generating and representing difficult pasts? What points of overlap, comparison, and contrast among these constructions of history and memory of authoritarianism, slavery, colonialism, genocide, armed conflict, fascism, and communism might offer an expanded understanding of difficult pasts in these transnational cultural contexts?

This collection is designed for any scholar of its central disciplines, as well as for those interested in cultural geography, memory studies, and postcolonial theory.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives (CC-BY-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

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chapter 1|16 pages

Staging the Story of a People

The Politics of Co-Performance at the National Museum of African American History and Culture
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chapter 2|15 pages

Theatricality & Spectacle

The Museum as Object
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chapter 3|19 pages

Curating the Experiential

The Imperial War Museum's Revised Holocaust Galleries
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chapter 4|17 pages

The Meaning of Working Through the Past

Of Awkward Objects and Collateral Memories
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chapter 5|15 pages

On Crying Perpetrators and Subversive Laughter

Trans-Affiliative Encounters inside ESMA Memory Museum
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chapter 6|16 pages

Refracting Difficult Pasts

Temporal Answers and the In-Between
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chapter 7|18 pages

Listening to the Museum, Hearing the Mine

Mapa Teatro's live Réplica to Modernity
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chapter 8|17 pages

Showcasing Anti-colonial Nationalist Struggles

Museums and Theatre in Contestation
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chapter 9|17 pages

‘It's art, all it can do is bear witness’

Remembering Histories of Enslavement in Black British Women's Plays and at the International Slavery Museum
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chapter 10|18 pages

Chile's Museum of Memory and Human Rights

Long Life to the Theatre!
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chapter 12|22 pages

Enforced Disappearance and Silenced Histories

Pedro Almodóvar's Madres paralelas/Parallel Mothers (2021)
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chapter 14|17 pages

Marketing a Massacre

When Outdoor Dramas Become Dark Tourism
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chapter |11 pages

Epilogue

10 Strategies for Exhibiting Absence and Loss: Objects, Narratives, and Trauma on Display
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