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Books in the Palgrave Macmillan Memory Studies series

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  • - Islands of Empire
    by Kate McMillan
    £58.49

    Told through the author's own perspective as an artist and examining the work of Julie Gough, Yuki Kihara, Megan Cope, Yhonnie Scarce, Lisa Reihana and Karla Dickens, the book develops a number of unique theories for configuring the relationship between art and a troubled past.

  • - Consuming Commemoration
     
    £114.49

    The essays in this volume bring together scholars of History, Literature, Art History, and Musicology to explore uses of memory in nineteenth-century empire-building and constructions of national identity, cultures of sentiment and mourning practices, and discourses of race and power.

  • - Memorialization Unmoored
     
    £104.49

    This volume explores the shifting tides of how political violence is memorialized in today's decentralized, digital era. The book enhances our understanding of how the digital turn is changing the ways that we remember, interpret, and memorialize the past.

  • - Migrants and Monuments
     
    £114.49

    The research is conceptually anchored in memory studies, notably transnational memory, multidirectional memory and other concepts emerging from memory studies' recent 'transcultural turn'.

  • - Mobilising Mediated Remembrance
     
    £114.49

    This collected volume is the first to study the interface between contemporary social movements, cultural memory and digital media. Establishing the digital memory work practices of social movements as an important area of research, it reveals how activists use digital media to lay claim to, circulate and curate cultural memories.

  • - An Itinerary
    by Kristina Gedgaudaite
    £42.99

    The Greco-Turkish War (1919-1922) in Asia Minor and the Population Exchange that followed led to the forced displacement of more than 1.5 million people who became entangled in the nation-building processes of both Greece and Turkey.

  • - Monuments, Traces, and Decentered Memories
     
    £90.49

    This book takes the urban space as a starting point for thinking about practices, actors, narratives, and imaginations within articulations of memory. They show that memories are shaped in contact zones, most often in conflict and within hierarchical social relations.

  • - New York, Charlottesville and Montgomery
    by Marouf A. Hasian Jr. & Nicholas S. Paliewicz
    £46.49

  • - A Global Context
     
    £114.49

    Contributors take note of differing aspects of memorial culture, such as those embedded in war memorials, mass grave sites, and exhibitions, as well as journalistic, literary and visual forms of commemorations, to investigate how narratives of memory can give meaning and form to places of trauma.

  • - Can We Really Learn From the Past?
    by Sarah Gensburger & Sandrine Lefranc
    £46.49 - 58.49

    This book provides a fresh perspective on the familiar belief that memory policies are successful in building peaceful societies. Whether in a stable democracy or in the wake of a violent political conflict, this book argues that memory policies are unhelpful in preventing hate, genocide, and mass crimes.

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