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OverviewThis Handbook explores the latest cross-disciplinary research on the inter-relationship between memory studies, place, and identity. In the works of dynamic memory, there is room for multiple stories, versions of the past and place understandings, and often resistance to mainstream narratives. Places may live on long after their physical destruction. This collection provides insights into the significant and diverse role memory plays in our understanding of the world around us, in a variety of spaces and temporalities, and through a variety of disciplinary and professional lenses. Many of the chapters in this Handbook explore place-making, its significance in everyday lives, and its loss. Processes of displacement, where people’s place attachments are violently torn asunder, are also considered. Ranging from oral history to forensic anthropology, from folklore studies to cultural geographies and beyond, the chapters in this Handbook reveal multiple and often unexpected facets of the fascinating relationship between place and memory, from the individual to the collective. This is a multi- and intra-disciplinary collection of the latest, most influential approaches to the interwoven and dynamic issues of place and memory. It will be of great use to researchers and academics working across Geography, Tourism, Heritage, Anthropology, Memory Studies, and Archaeology. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Sarah De Nardi , Hilary Orange , Steven High , Eerika Koskinen-KoivistoPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.880kg ISBN: 9780367776749ISBN 10: 036777674 Pages: 440 Publication Date: 01 April 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction PART 1 Mobility 1 The restorative museum: understanding the work of memory at the Museum of Refugee Memory in Skala Loutron, Lesvos, Greece 2 Urban heritage between silenced memories and ‘rootless’ inhabitants. The case of the Adriatic coast in Slovenia 3 Uncanny District Six: removals, remains and deferred regeneration 4 Post-Colonial connections with the British landscape: an African-centric autoethnography 5 Mapping memories of exile PART 2 Difficult Memories 6 Memory and space. (Re)reading Halbwachs 7 Remembering Belene Island: commemorating a site of violence 8 The landscapes of death among the Selk’nams. Place, mobility, memory, and forgetting 9 Forensic archaeology and the production of memorial sites: situating the mass grave in a wider memory landscape 10 Urban bombsites PART 3 Memoryscapes 11 When memoryscapes move: ‘Comfort Women’ memorials as transnational 12 The spatiality of memoryscapes, public memory and commemoration 13 Stó:lō memoryscapes as Indigenous ways of knowing: Stó:lō history from stone and fire 14 Pots, tunnels and mountains: myth, memory and landscape at Great Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe 15 Learning by doing: memoryscape as an educational tool PART 4 Industry 16 Post-industrial memoryscapes: combatting working-class erasure in North America and Europe 17 Remembering spaces of work 18 Memory and post-industrial landscapes in Govan (Scotland) 19 ‘Hidden in plain sight’: uncovering the gendered heritage of an industrial landscape 20 Remembered into place 21 Thinking volumetrically About urban memory: the buried memories and networked remembrances of underground railways PART 5 The Body 22 Memorialising war: rethinking heritage and affect in the context of Pearl Harbor 23 Lieux de mémoire through the senses: memory, state-sponsored history and sensory experience 24 Memory and the photological landscape 25 Walking, writing, reading place and memory 26 Mnemonic mapping practices 27 Facilitating voicing and listening in the context of post-conflict performances of memory. The Colombian scenario PART 6 Shared traditions 28 Folklore, politics, and place-making in Northern Ireland 29 Rewilding as heritage-making: new natural heritage and renewed memories in Portugal 30 Taste and memory in action. Translating academic knowledge to public knowledge. 31 Foodshed as memoryscape. Legacies of innovation and ambivalence in New England’s agricultural economy 32 Historicising historical re-enactment and urban heritagescapes: engaging with past and place through historical pageantry, c. 1900–1950s PART 7 Ritual 33 “My death waits there among the flowers”: popular music shrines in London as memory and remembrance 34 An ethnography of memory in the secret valleys of the Himalayas: sacred topographies of mind in two Beyul pilgrimages 35 Cremation and contemporary churchyards 36 Ritual, place and memory in ancient Rome 37 Ritually recycling the landscape 38 Contested memory in the holy springs of Western SiberiaReviews""This Handbook is an absolute must for anyone interested in the complex relationship between memory, place and identity. The editors, coming from archaeology, ethnology, history and tourism studies, have assembled an impressive line-up of extremely competent authors who explore this relationship in multi-faceted and multi- as well as inter-disciplinary ways. Relating spatial and temporal identities to questions of memory proves to be extremely fruitful in understanding how people have attempted to make sense of the world around them in its historical evolution. It also underlines in intriguing ways that these processes of sense production were always contested and the subject of intense political conflicts. Thus the Handbook makes a valuable contribution to the re-politicisation of memory discourses in scholarship and in the wider public sphere."" Stefan Berger, Professor of Social History and Director of the Institute for Social Movements, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum, Germany ""This is an innovative, exciting and timely collection which offers a compelling set of approaches, narratives and settings exploring the all-important matter of memory in relation to a range of places across the world. In an era of unprecedented eco-social turbulence/crisis, entangled with conflict, mobility and displacement, digital connectivity, transforming senses of individual and collective identities, and nostalgia based politics, this collection brings approaches across the social sciences and humanities into very telling conversations about the matter of emplaced memories, and key themes such as post-colonialism, embodiment, ritual and identity."" Owain Jones, Professor of Environmental Humanities, Bath Spa University Environmental Humanities Research Centre, UK This Handbook is an absolute must for anyone interested in the complex relationship between memory, place and identity. The editors, coming from archaeology, ethnology, history and tourism studies, have assembled an impressive line-up of extremely competent authors who explore this relationship in multi-faceted and multi- as well as inter-disciplinary ways. Relating spatial and temporal identities to questions of memory proves to be extremely fruitful in understanding how people have attempted to make sense of the world around them in its historical evolution. It also underlines in intriguing ways that these processes of sense production were always contested and the subject of intense political conflicts. Thus the Handbook makes a valuable contribution to the re-politicisation of memory discourses in scholarship and in the wider public sphere. Stefan Berger, Professor of Social History and Director of the Institute for Social Movements, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum, Germany This is an innovative, exciting and timely collection which offers a compelling set of approaches, narratives and settings exploring the all-important matter of memory in relation to a range of places across the world. In an era of unprecedented eco-social turbulence/crisis, entangled with conflict, mobility and displacement, digital connectivity, transforming senses of individual and collective identities, and nostalgia based politics, this collection brings approaches across the social sciences and humanities into very telling conversations about the matter of emplaced memories, and key themes such as post-colonialism, embodiment, ritual and identity. Owain Jones, Professor of Environmental Humanities, Bath Spa University Environmental Humanities Research Centre, UK This Handbook is an absolute must for anyone interested in the complex relationship between memory, place and identity. The editors, coming from archaeology, ethnology, history and tourism studies, have assembled an impressive line-up of extremely competent authors who explore this relationship in multi-faceted and multi- as well as inter-disciplinary ways. Relating spatial and temporal identities to questions of memory proves to be extremely fruitful in understanding how people have attempted to make sense of the world around them in its historical evolution. It also underlines in intriguing ways that these processes of sense production were always contested and the subject of intense political conflicts. Thus the Handbook makes a valuable contribution to the re-politicisation of memory discourses in scholarship and in the wider public sphere. Stefan Berger, Professor of Social History and Director of the Institute for Social Movements, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum, Germany This is an innovative, exciting and timely collection which offers a compelling set of approaches, narratives and settings exploring the all-important matter of memory in relation to a range of places across the world. In an era of unprecedented eco-social turbulence/crisis, entangled with conflict, mobility and displacement, digital connectivity, transforming senses of individual and collective identities, and nostalgia based politics, this collection brings approaches across the social sciences and humanities into very telling conversations about the matter of emplaced memories, and key themes such as post-colonialism, embodiment, ritual and identity. Owain Jones, Professor of Environmental Humanities, Bath Spa University Environmental Humanities Research Centre, UK """This Handbook is an absolute must for anyone interested in the complex relationship between memory, place and identity. The editors, coming from archaeology, ethnology, history and tourism studies, have assembled an impressive line-up of extremely competent authors who explore this relationship in multi-faceted and multi- as well as inter-disciplinary ways. Relating spatial and temporal identities to questions of memory proves to be extremely fruitful in understanding how people have attempted to make sense of the world around them in its historical evolution. It also underlines in intriguing ways that these processes of sense production were always contested and the subject of intense political conflicts. Thus the Handbook makes a valuable contribution to the re-politicisation of memory discourses in scholarship and in the wider public sphere."" Stefan Berger, Professor of Social History and Director of the Institute for Social Movements, Ruhr-Universitaet Bochum, Germany ""This is an innovative, exciting and timely collection which offers a compelling set of approaches, narratives and settings exploring the all-important matter of memory in relation to a range of places across the world. In an era of unprecedented eco-social turbulence/crisis, entangled with conflict, mobility and displacement, digital connectivity, transforming senses of individual and collective identities, and nostalgia based politics, this collection brings approaches across the social sciences and humanities into very telling conversations about the matter of emplaced memories, and key themes such as post-colonialism, embodiment, ritual and identity."" Owain Jones, Professor of Environmental Humanities, Bath Spa University Environmental Humanities Research Centre, UK" Author InformationSarah De Nardi is a Lecturer in Heritage and Tourism at Western Sydney University, Australia. Hilary Orange is an Honorary Research Associate at the UCL Institute of Archaeology, specialising in the contemporary past, particularly on deindustrialisation and industrial heritage. Steven High is Professor of History at Concordia University’s Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling, Canada. Eerika Koskinen-Koivisto is an ethnologist and Emil Aaltonen research fellow at the Department of History and Ethnology, the University of Jyväskylä, Finland. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |