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E-grāmata: Memorials in the Aftermath of Armed Conflict: From History to Heritage

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Through case studies from Europe and Russia, this volume analyses memorials as a means for the present to make claims on the past in the aftermath of armed conflict. The central contention is that memorials are not backward-looking, inert reminders of past events, but instead active triggers of personal and shared emotion, that are inescapably political, bound up with how societies reconstruct their present and future as they negotiate their way out of (and sometimes back into) conflict. A central aim of the book is to highlight and illustrate the cultural and ethical complexity of memorials, as focal points for a tension between the notion of memory as truth, and the practice of memory as negotiable. By adopting a relatively bounded temporal and spatial scope, the volume seeks to move beyond the established focus on national traditions, to reveal cultural commonalities and shared influences in the memorial forms and practices of individual regions and of particular conflicts.   
1 Memorials and Memorialisation: History, Forms, and Affects
1(32)
Marie Louise Stig Sorensen
Dacia Viejo Rose
Paola Filippucci
2 Polarised Topography of Rival Memories: The Commemorations of the 11th March 2004 Train Bombings in Madrid
33(28)
Gerome True
Cristina Sanchez-Carretero
3 From Salvation to Struggle: Commemoration, Affect, and Agency in Cyprus
61(34)
Rebecca Bryant
Mete Hatay
4 Heritagization of the Gulag: A Case Study from the Solovetsky Islands
95(32)
Margaret Comer
5 Potocari Memorial Center and Commemorations of the Srebrenica Genocide
127(32)
Dzenan Sahovic
6 Conflicted Memorials and the Need to Look Forward. The j Interplay Between Remembering and Forgetting in Mostar and on the Kosovo Field
159(24)
Gustav Wollentz
7 The Dudik Memorial Complex: Commemoration and Changing Regimes in the Contested City of Vukovar
183(46)
Britt Baillie
8 From Socialist `Memorialkombinat' to a Place of Learning. The Heidefriedhof Cemetery in Dresden as an Arena for Competing Cultures of Memory
229(50)
Matthias Neutzner
9 The Isted Lion: From Memorial of War to Monument of Friendship
279(26)
Marie Louise Stig Sorensen
Inge Adriansen
Index 305
Marie Louise Stig Sųrensen is Professor of European Prehistory and Heritage Studies at the University of Cambridge, UK and Professor of Bronze Age studies at Leiden University, The Netherlands. Dacia Viejo-Rose is Lecturer in Heritage and the Politics of the Past at the University of Cambridge, UK. Paola Filippucci is Lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of Cambridge, UK.