This book rhetorically and historically examines the contextual and experiential dimensions of a wide range of public places that are the products and allocators of political power.
This book rhetorically and historically examines the contextual and experiential dimensions of a wide range of public places that are the products and allocators of political power.
Carl T. Hyden is associate dean of the School of Global Journalism and Communication at Morgan State University. Theodore F. Sheckels is professor of English and communication studies and chair of the Department of Communication Studies at Randolph-Macon College.
Inhaltsangabe
Chapter 1. The National 9/11 Memorials: Whom Do We Remember and How Do We Remember Them? Chapter 2. Local 9/11 Memorials: Remembering the Events of 9/11 Away from Ground Zero Chapter 3. Johnstown, Pennsylvania: Remembering Slowly and Differently Chapter 4. Point Lookout, Maryland: Remembering the Fort Lincoln Dead, Eventually and Variously Chapter 5. Lincoln and Son Come to Richmond: Remembering the 16th President in the Heart of the Confederacy Chapter 6. Slavery, Thurgood Marshall, Roger B. Taney: Maryland's Conflicted Relationships Chapter 7. Cambridge, Maryland: Redoing the City's History Chapter 8. American Cities: Trying to Forget Chapter 9. Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania: Remembering in the Wrong Place Chapter 10. Chicago's Park System: Make No Little Plans Chapter 11. The High Line: Creating Networks of Accidental Activists, Residents, Philanthropists, Business People and Politicians to Create an Unlikely Urban Park Chapter 12. U Street NW and H Street NE in Washington, DC: Contested Corridors Chapter 13. The Westminster Arcade: Politics and Renaissance in Providence Chapter 14. PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Remembering and Celebrating at the Old Ballgame Conclusion: Reading Politically
Chapter 1. The National 9/11 Memorials: Whom Do We Remember and How Do We Remember Them? Chapter 2. Local 9/11 Memorials: Remembering the Events of 9/11 Away from Ground Zero Chapter 3. Johnstown, Pennsylvania: Remembering Slowly and Differently Chapter 4. Point Lookout, Maryland: Remembering the Fort Lincoln Dead, Eventually and Variously Chapter 5. Lincoln and Son Come to Richmond: Remembering the 16th President in the Heart of the Confederacy Chapter 6. Slavery, Thurgood Marshall, Roger B. Taney: Maryland's Conflicted Relationships Chapter 7. Cambridge, Maryland: Redoing the City's History Chapter 8. American Cities: Trying to Forget Chapter 9. Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania: Remembering in the Wrong Place Chapter 10. Chicago's Park System: Make No Little Plans Chapter 11. The High Line: Creating Networks of Accidental Activists, Residents, Philanthropists, Business People and Politicians to Create an Unlikely Urban Park Chapter 12. U Street NW and H Street NE in Washington, DC: Contested Corridors Chapter 13. The Westminster Arcade: Politics and Renaissance in Providence Chapter 14. PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Remembering and Celebrating at the Old Ballgame Conclusion: Reading Politically
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