Contested Urban Spaces Monuments, Traces, and Decentered Memories /

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Capdepón, Ulrike (Editor), Dornhof, Sarah (Editor)
Summary:XVI, 304 p. 23 illus., 3 illus. in color.
text
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022.
Edition:1st ed. 2022.
Series:Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies,
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-87505-3
Format: Electronic Book
Table of Contents:
  • Chapter 1: Introduction: Contested Memory in Urban Space
  • Part I: Approaching contested urban memoryscapes
  • Chapter 2: (In)visibile Monuments. What Makes Monuments Controversial?
  • Chapter 3: Australian Welcome Walls and Other Sites of Networked Migrant Memory
  • Chapter 4: Negotiating binaries in curatorial practice: modality, temporality, and materiality in Cape Town’s community-led urban history museums
  • Chapter 5: Contesting Sensory Memories: Smithfield Market in London
  • Part II: Decentered Memories
  • Chapter 6: Across the Atlantic. Silences and Memories of Nazism in Remote Lands (Eldorado, Misiones)
  • Chapter 7: [De]colonial Memory Practices in Germany’s Public Space
  • Chapter 8: Splinters between Memory and Globalization: Cosmic Generator Installation by Mika Rottenberg in Münster at Skulptur Projekte 2017
  • Part III: Fallen Monuments
  • Chapter 9: The Empty Pedestal: Artistic Practice and Public Space in Luanda
  • Chapter 10: They Took Him Away but It Was Like He Was StillAround: Can New York City Move Beyond the Legacy of J. Marion Sims?
  • Chapter 11: Disgraced Monuments: Burying and Unearthing Lenin and Lyautey
  • Part IV: Traces of Violence
  • Chapter 12: Urban Memory after War: Ruins and reconstructions in post-Yugoslav cities
  • Chapter 13: Monumentality, Forensic Practices, and the Representation of the Dead: the Debate about the Memory of the Post-Civil War Victims in the Almudena Cemetery, Madrid
  • Chapter 14: The Mass Grave and the Memorial. Notes from Mexico on Memory Work as Contestation of Contemporary Terror.