This book explores how ephemeral and displaced public memories continue to linger and circulate around the National Mall in Washington, DC. Chapters examine unrecognized historical events on the Mall, selective interpretations of the past within the Mall's sites, and places of public memory hiding in plain sight.
This book explores how ephemeral and displaced public memories continue to linger and circulate around the National Mall in Washington, DC. Chapters examine unrecognized historical events on the Mall, selective interpretations of the past within the Mall's sites, and places of public memory hiding in plain sight.
Edited by Roger C. Aden - Contributions by Derek Alderman; Teresa Bergman; Ethan Bottone; A. Cheree Carlson; Carlos Flores; Kenneth E. Foote; Marouf Hasian Jr.; Aaron Hess; Carl T. Hyden; Joshua Inwood; Sean Luechtefeld; Stephanie Marek Muller; Theodore F
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments I. Introduction Chapter 1. Haunting, Public Memories, and the National Mall Roger C. Aden II. Affective Presences of Ephemeral Memories Chapter 2. Invoking the Spirits: A Rhetorical Séance Aaron Hess, A. Cheree Carlson, and Carlos Flores Chapter 3. Before the National Mall: Coxey's Army and the Precedent for Public Protest Sean Luechtefeld Chapter 4. The Bonus Army March of 1932: Uneasy Legacies of Protest, Dissent, and Violence in American Memory Roger C. Aden and Kenneth E. Foote Chapter 5. The "Unmarked and Unremarked" Memories of the National Mall: Resurrection City and the Unreconciled History of the Civil Rights Movement as Radical Place-Making Ethan Bottone, Derek H. Alderman, and Joshua Inwood III. Faint Traces of Deflected Memories Chapter 6. Haunting Dreams: Time and Affect in the Neoliberal Commemoration of "I Have a Dream" Michael P. Vicaro Chapter 7. The Haunting of "Forgotten" Places: Nineteenth Century Slave-Pens on the National Mall Elizabethada A. Wright Chapter 8. The Portrait Monument's Emblematic and Tortured History Teresa Bergman Chapter 9. Which Souls Shall Haunt Us? Competing Genocidal Memoryscapes and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's Selective Colonial Memorializations Marouf Hasian Jr. and Stephanie Marek Muller Chapter 10. Oft' Remembered, Oft' Forgotten: Remembering James Garfield Theodore F. Sheckels Chapter 11. The National Gallery of Art: Remembering the Haunting Voices of the Ghosts Carl T. Hyden IV. Conclusion Chapter 12. Confronting the Ghosts in the National Attic Roger C. Aden Index About the Editor About the Contributors
Acknowledgments I. Introduction Chapter 1. Haunting, Public Memories, and the National Mall Roger C. Aden II. Affective Presences of Ephemeral Memories Chapter 2. Invoking the Spirits: A Rhetorical Séance Aaron Hess, A. Cheree Carlson, and Carlos Flores Chapter 3. Before the National Mall: Coxey's Army and the Precedent for Public Protest Sean Luechtefeld Chapter 4. The Bonus Army March of 1932: Uneasy Legacies of Protest, Dissent, and Violence in American Memory Roger C. Aden and Kenneth E. Foote Chapter 5. The "Unmarked and Unremarked" Memories of the National Mall: Resurrection City and the Unreconciled History of the Civil Rights Movement as Radical Place-Making Ethan Bottone, Derek H. Alderman, and Joshua Inwood III. Faint Traces of Deflected Memories Chapter 6. Haunting Dreams: Time and Affect in the Neoliberal Commemoration of "I Have a Dream" Michael P. Vicaro Chapter 7. The Haunting of "Forgotten" Places: Nineteenth Century Slave-Pens on the National Mall Elizabethada A. Wright Chapter 8. The Portrait Monument's Emblematic and Tortured History Teresa Bergman Chapter 9. Which Souls Shall Haunt Us? Competing Genocidal Memoryscapes and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum's Selective Colonial Memorializations Marouf Hasian Jr. and Stephanie Marek Muller Chapter 10. Oft' Remembered, Oft' Forgotten: Remembering James Garfield Theodore F. Sheckels Chapter 11. The National Gallery of Art: Remembering the Haunting Voices of the Ghosts Carl T. Hyden IV. Conclusion Chapter 12. Confronting the Ghosts in the National Attic Roger C. Aden Index About the Editor About the Contributors
Es gelten unsere Allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen: www.buecher.de/agb
Impressum
www.buecher.de ist ein Internetauftritt der buecher.de internetstores GmbH
Geschäftsführung: Monica Sawhney | Roland Kölbl | Günter Hilger
Sitz der Gesellschaft: Batheyer Straße 115 - 117, 58099 Hagen
Postanschrift: Bürgermeister-Wegele-Str. 12, 86167 Augsburg
Amtsgericht Hagen HRB 13257
Steuernummer: 321/5800/1497
USt-IdNr: DE450055826