ABSTRACT

Monuments as Cultural and Critical Objects explores monuments as political, psychical, social, and mystical objects. Incorporating autoethnography, psychoanalysis, deconstruction, postcolonialism, and queer ecology, Houlton argues for a radical, interdisciplinary approach to our monument-culture. 

Tracing historical developments in monuments alongside contemporary movements such as Rhodes Must Fall and Black Lives Matter, Houlton provides an in-depth critique of monument sites, as well as new critical and conceptual methodologies for thinking across the field. Alongside analysis of monuments to the Holocaust, colonial figures, and LGBTQIA+ subjects, this book provides new critical engagements with the work of D.W. Winnicott, Marion Milner, Jacques Derrida, Edward Said, Eve Sedgwick, and others. Houlton traces the potential for monuments to exert great influence over our sense of self, nation, community, sexuality, and place in the world. Exploring the psychic and physical spaces these objects occupy—their aesthetics, affects, politics, and powers—this book considers how monuments can challenge our identities, beliefs, and our very notions of remembrance.

The interdisciplinary nature of Monuments as Cultural and Critical Objects means that it is ideally placed to intervene across several critical fields, particularly museum and heritage studies. It will also prove invaluable to those engaged in the study of monuments, psychoanalytic object relations, decolonization, queer ecology, radical death studies, and affect theory.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

‘Face the dark confusion’: experiencing monuments

part I|32 pages

The monument

chapter Chapter 1|14 pages

The monument and the arts of memory

chapter Chapter 2|16 pages

Theorising the monument

part II|57 pages

The monument and psychoanalysis

chapter Chapter 3|21 pages

The monument, the Holocaust, and the crypt

Rachel Whiteread, Jacques Derrida, and Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok's cryptonymy

chapter Chapter 4|15 pages

D.W. Winnicott and the destruction of the monument

part III|77 pages

Monuments, colonialism, and imperial spaces

chapter Chapter 6|17 pages

Monuments and colonial domination

chapter Chapter 7|23 pages

Cecil Rhodes, Oriel College, and the will to change

chapter Chapter 8|35 pages

Decolonising Edward Colston in Bristol

The contrapuntal monument

part IV|90 pages

Queer monuments

chapter Chapter 11|11 pages

Paranoid monuments, Eve Sedgwick, and queer remembrance

(Or, you probably think this monument is about you)

chapter Chapter 12|41 pages

The monument and queer ecology

chapter |11 pages

Epilogue

Mesolithic monuments, ecosystemic collapse, and hope in the time of coronavirus