ABSTRACT

This book bridges theoretical gaps that exist between the meta-concepts of memory, place and identity by positioning its lens on the emplaced practices of commemoration and the remembrance of war and conflict.

This book examines how diverse publics relate to their wartime histories through engagements with everyday collective memories, in differing places. Specifically addressing questions of place-making, displacement and identity, contributions shed new light on the processes of commemoration of war in everyday urban façades and within generations of families and national communities. Contributions seek to clarify how we connect with memories and places of war and conflict. The spatial and narrative manifestations of attempts to contextualise wartime memories of loss, trauma, conflict, victory and suffering are refracted through the roles played by emotion and identity construction in the shaping of post-war remembrances. This book offers a multidisciplinary perspective, with insights from history, memory studies, social psychology, cultural and urban geography, to contextualise memories of war and their ‘use’ by national governments, perpetrators, victims and in family histories.

part |74 pages

Placing memory in public

chapter |18 pages

Multiple and contested geographies of memory

Remembering the 1989 Romanian ‘revolution'

chapter |18 pages

Wrecks to relics

Battle remains and the formation of a battlescape, Sha'ar HaGai, Israel

part |74 pages

Narrative memorial practices: Storytelling and materiality in placing memory

chapter |16 pages

Who were the enemies?

The spatial practices of belonging and exclusion in Second World War Italy

chapter |19 pages

Sound memory

A critical concept for researching memories of conflict and war

chapter |16 pages

Heralding Jericho

Narratives of remembrance, reclamation and Republican identity in Belfast, Northern Ireland

chapter |21 pages

In the shadow of centenaries

Irish artists go to war, 1914–1918

part |87 pages

Commemorative vigilance and rituals of remembering in place

chapter |16 pages

Beyond sentimentality and glorification

Using a history of emotions to deal with the horror of war

chapter |15 pages

Witnessing and affect

Altering, imagining and making spaces to remember the Great War in modern Britain