ABSTRACT

How do places manipulate our emotions? How are spaces affectious in their articulation and design? This book provides theoretical frameworks for exploring affective dimensions of architectural sites based on the notion that heritage, as an embodied experience, is embedded in places and spaces.

Drawing together an interdisciplinary collection of essays spanning geographically diverse architectural sites — including Ford’s Theater, the site of President Lincoln’s assassination; the Estadio Nacional of Santiago, Chile, where 12,000 detainees were held following the ouster of President Salvador Allende; and Unit 731, the site of a biological and chemical warfare research unit of the Imperial Japanese army in Harbin, China, amongst others — this edited collection assembles critical dialogue amongst scholars and practitioners engaging in affective and other more-than-representational approaches to cultural memory, heritage, and identity-making. Broken into three main sections: Affective Politics; Embedded Geographies; and Affective Methodologies, this book draws together multidisciplinary perspectives from the arts, social sciences and humanities to understand the role of architecture in generating embodied experiences at places of memory.

This book offers interdisciplinary perspectives on fundamental questions of memory, identity and space. It will be of interest to students and scholars in the fields of geography, architecture, cultural studies, and museum and heritage studies.

chapter |16 pages

Affective architectures

An introduction

part I|88 pages

Affective politics

chapter 1|21 pages

“Give them more and more for their dollar”

Searching for slavery amongst the plantation edutainment complex

chapter 2|15 pages

The old/new Unit 731 Museum

A place of memory and oblivion

chapter 3|12 pages

Dwellers of silence

Conflict and affective borderlands of the Estadio Nacional, Santiago de Chile

chapter 4|23 pages

Toxic landfills, survivor trees, and dust cloud memories

More-than-human ecologies of 9/11 memory 1

chapter 5|15 pages

The affect of memorializing the loss, the affect of losing the memorial

Confederate war monuments in New Orleans

part II|80 pages

Embedded geographies

chapter 7|20 pages

Body in the Forbidden City

Embodied sensibilities and lived experience in the affective architecture

chapter 8|11 pages

Colonial unknowing and affective uncertainty

Sewers and eels in Troy, New York

chapter 9|17 pages

Lamenting the dead

The affective afterlife of poets’ graves

part III|82 pages

Affective methodologies

chapter 11|17 pages

The memory in bodily and architectural making

Reflections from embodied cognitive science

chapter 12|16 pages

Architecture as memorialisation

“Using” buildings to remember the Shoah

chapter 15|15 pages

Virtual reality and memorials

(Re)building and experiencing the past