Amending our Pasts and Futures: Observing Media and Place as Means to Memory is a collection of original research from prominent and emerging scholars of public and collective memory. Through critical rhetorical and qualitative analysis, contributors show how media and place shape our collective presents as an effort to amend our hurtful pasts.
Amending our Pasts and Futures: Observing Media and Place as Means to Memory is a collection of original research from prominent and emerging scholars of public and collective memory. Through critical rhetorical and qualitative analysis, contributors show how media and place shape our collective presents as an effort to amend our hurtful pasts.
Nina Gjoci is lecturer of public memory in the Department of Communication Culture and Media Studies at Howard University.
Inhaltsangabe
Chapter 1: Reconciliation or Adaptive Racism? Truth, Rage, and Embrace in "I'm Not Racist"Author: John B. Hatch, Eastern University Chapter 2: Documenting a Horrific Memory Author: Ariel E. Seay-Howard, North Carolina State University Chapter 3: 21st Century Black Magic: An Analysis of Afrofuturism and Invention in A Black Lady Sketch Show as an Avenue Toward Black Liberation Author: Natalie Weathers, Howard University Chapter 4. Junction Historicizing of Conflict and Sporting Competition: Communicating Resolution and Reconciliation Author: Chuka Onwumechili, Howard University Chapter 5: Patterns of Discursive Amnesia and Intentional Erasures: Collective Memory and Political Mechanizations of Nationalism Author 1: Victoria A. Newsom, Olympic College Author 2: Lara Martin Lengel, Bowling Green State University Chapter 6: "Franklin, My Dear": Post-racial Counter Narratives and Civil War Public Memory Author 1: Patricia Davis, Northeastern University Author 2: Christina Moss, University of Memphis Chapter 7: Hiding Behind Heritage in Post-Communist Albania Author: Dana F. Phelps, Norfolk Academy Chapter 8: Out of Place to In Place: Recognizing and Re/Membering the Hawaiian DiasporaAuthor: Rona Tamiko Halualani, San Jose State University Chapter 9: Memories of Labor: The Anthracite Coal Miners' Memorial Amid Landscapes of Deindustrialization Author: Melissa R. Meade, Seton Hall University Chapter 10: ¿Quiénes somos? The Representation of the Latino Identity in the "¡Presente! A Latino History of the United States" exhibit Author 1: Lillian Agosto Maldonado, Howard University Author 2: Natalie Febo, National Museum of American Latino
Chapter 1: Reconciliation or Adaptive Racism? Truth, Rage, and Embrace in "I'm Not Racist"Author: John B. Hatch, Eastern University Chapter 2: Documenting a Horrific Memory Author: Ariel E. Seay-Howard, North Carolina State University Chapter 3: 21st Century Black Magic: An Analysis of Afrofuturism and Invention in A Black Lady Sketch Show as an Avenue Toward Black Liberation Author: Natalie Weathers, Howard University Chapter 4. Junction Historicizing of Conflict and Sporting Competition: Communicating Resolution and Reconciliation Author: Chuka Onwumechili, Howard University Chapter 5: Patterns of Discursive Amnesia and Intentional Erasures: Collective Memory and Political Mechanizations of Nationalism Author 1: Victoria A. Newsom, Olympic College Author 2: Lara Martin Lengel, Bowling Green State University Chapter 6: "Franklin, My Dear": Post-racial Counter Narratives and Civil War Public Memory Author 1: Patricia Davis, Northeastern University Author 2: Christina Moss, University of Memphis Chapter 7: Hiding Behind Heritage in Post-Communist Albania Author: Dana F. Phelps, Norfolk Academy Chapter 8: Out of Place to In Place: Recognizing and Re/Membering the Hawaiian DiasporaAuthor: Rona Tamiko Halualani, San Jose State University Chapter 9: Memories of Labor: The Anthracite Coal Miners' Memorial Amid Landscapes of Deindustrialization Author: Melissa R. Meade, Seton Hall University Chapter 10: ¿Quiénes somos? The Representation of the Latino Identity in the "¡Presente! A Latino History of the United States" exhibit Author 1: Lillian Agosto Maldonado, Howard University Author 2: Natalie Febo, National Museum of American Latino
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