The chapter explores the effects of the re-emergence of a "materialist paradigm" and a "forensic aesthetics" on cultures of commemoration (and monumentalisation) of historical violent events. A semiotic reflection on the concept of trace - pivotal notion within forensic studies - is proposed. Through an analysis of some memory sites that monumentalise or sacralise material traces of the commemorated event, the chapter shows how the indexical features of the trace are sometimes converted in "iconic" features. In conclusion, the chapter proposes an integrative, semiotic-forensic approach to sites of political violence and the processes of their memorialisation
Contested, post-Holocaust sites remain unmarked if we think of memorialization practices in a tradi...
Abstract: The author discusses uncommemorated and under-remembered sites of past violence in terms o...
Abstract: This article appropriates the forensic ar-chaeological notion of “forensic landscape ” fo...
Over the last twenty years memory and trauma have been the object of fast growing attention in the ...
"There is nothing in this world as invisible as a monument" - Robert Musil, 1987 In this talk, I ...
This article aims to analyse one specific type of memorial site that furnishes an indexical link to...
This article analyses strategies of material commemoration in contemporary urban spaces. Deploying a...
With the example of a recent sculpture by Mladen Miljanovic, Death Capital (2022), my presentation w...
[Extract] In the seventy-three years since Primo Levi extolled us to ‘never forget’ the genocide of ...
All social structures, ranging from world-wide cultural communities to local networks of individuals...
Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potentially create a tension between form an...
© 2001 Dr. Rebecca Scott BrayThis research considers the visualisation of the dead body throughout f...
埼玉県越谷市Late-modern society is full of memories. Memories of trauma are observed particularly in the f...
The author discusses uncommemorated and under-remembered sites of past violence in terms of the cond...
Only some of potential sites of memory are signed with plaques, gravestones or memorials. The conte...
Contested, post-Holocaust sites remain unmarked if we think of memorialization practices in a tradi...
Abstract: The author discusses uncommemorated and under-remembered sites of past violence in terms o...
Abstract: This article appropriates the forensic ar-chaeological notion of “forensic landscape ” fo...
Over the last twenty years memory and trauma have been the object of fast growing attention in the ...
"There is nothing in this world as invisible as a monument" - Robert Musil, 1987 In this talk, I ...
This article aims to analyse one specific type of memorial site that furnishes an indexical link to...
This article analyses strategies of material commemoration in contemporary urban spaces. Deploying a...
With the example of a recent sculpture by Mladen Miljanovic, Death Capital (2022), my presentation w...
[Extract] In the seventy-three years since Primo Levi extolled us to ‘never forget’ the genocide of ...
All social structures, ranging from world-wide cultural communities to local networks of individuals...
Images of atrocity are deeply problematic, in that they potentially create a tension between form an...
© 2001 Dr. Rebecca Scott BrayThis research considers the visualisation of the dead body throughout f...
埼玉県越谷市Late-modern society is full of memories. Memories of trauma are observed particularly in the f...
The author discusses uncommemorated and under-remembered sites of past violence in terms of the cond...
Only some of potential sites of memory are signed with plaques, gravestones or memorials. The conte...
Contested, post-Holocaust sites remain unmarked if we think of memorialization practices in a tradi...
Abstract: The author discusses uncommemorated and under-remembered sites of past violence in terms o...
Abstract: This article appropriates the forensic ar-chaeological notion of “forensic landscape ” fo...