ABSTRACT

Emotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the Present is a response to debates in the humanities and social sciences about the use of emotion. This timely and unique book explores the ways emotion is embroiled and used in contemporary engagements with the past, particularly in contexts such as heritage sites, museums, commemorations, political rhetoric and ideology, debates over issues of social memory, and touristic uses of heritage sites.

Including contributions from academics and practitioners in a range of countries, the book reviews significant and conflicting academic debates on the nature and expression of affect and emotion. As a whole, the book makes an argument for a pragmatic understanding of affect and, in doing so, outlines Wetherell’s concept of affective practice, a concept utilised in most of the chapters in this book. Since debates about affect and emotion can often be confusing and abstract, the book aims to clarify these debates and, through the use of case studies, draw out their implications for theory and practice within heritage and museum studies.

Emotion, Affective Practices, and the Past in the Present should be essential reading for students, academics, and professionals in the fields of heritage and museum studies. The book will also be of interest to those in other disciplines, such as social psychology, education, archaeology, tourism studies, cultural studies, media studies, anthropology, sociology, and history.

chapter 1|22 pages

Introduction

Affective heritage practices

part |80 pages

Commemoration and remembering

chapter 2|14 pages

Labour of love and devotion?

The search for the lost soldiers of Russia

chapter 3|17 pages

Troubling heritage

Intimate pasts and public memories at Derry/Londonderry’s ‘Temple’

chapter 5|15 pages

Constructing heritage through subjectivity

Museum of Broken Relationships

chapter 6|18 pages

The Battle of Orgreave (1984)

part |92 pages

Belonging and exclusion

chapter 7|19 pages

Apologising for past wrongs

Emotion–reason rhetoric in political discourse

chapter 8|25 pages

Experiencing mixed emotions in the museum

Empathy, affect, and memory in visitors’ responses to histories of migration

chapter 9|14 pages

Coming undone

Protocols of emotion in Canadian human rights museology

chapter 10|16 pages

Touring the post-conflict city

Negotiating affects during Belfast’s black cab mural tours

chapter 11|16 pages

Performing affection, constructing heritage?

Civil and political mobilisations around the Ottoman legacy in Bulgaria

part |109 pages

Learning, teaching and engaging

chapter 13|17 pages

Affective practices of learning at the museum

Children’s critical encounters with the past

chapter 14|16 pages

White guilt and shame

Students’ emotional reactions to digital stories of race in a South African classroom

chapter 16|16 pages

‘Head and heart’ responses to Treaty education in Aotearoa New Zealand

Feeling the timeline of colonisation

chapter 17|23 pages

Raw emotion

The Living Memory module at three sites of practice