This article examines tourists’ experiences of visiting the Tomsk Memorial Museum of Political Repression. Through a semiological reading of the exhibitions and textual analysis of visitor books, I show how despite the museum’s proclaimed purpose as a place of remembrance, tourists frame their visits in terms of education and entertainment. Referring to memory as a discursive practice, I demonstrate how the exhibition does not fit the dominant patriotic discourse, wherein actors are remembered for their contributions to the Motherland. Because those killed in Gulags are represented as victims rather than heroes, their story remains insignificant and immemorable to many Russians.
This paper discusses Holocaust memorial culture and analyzes how museums, memorials sites, tourism, ...
On January 16, 1945 Grodzisk Mazowiecki, a town 30 kilometers from Warsaw, was bombed by Soviet air...
How can museums pass on the remembrances of the survivors of Holocaust in ways that engage visitors?...
This article examines the commemoration practices of the Gulag in the Russian Federation. On the bas...
This study focuses on nuclear tourism, which flourished a decade ago in the Exclusion Zone, a regime...
The official Soviet narrative of the Second World War used the concept of heroism to imbue war comme...
Germany offers numerous examples of memorial museums, although beyond Berlin they are poorly represe...
CC BY 4.0This study focuses on nuclear tourism, which flourished a decade ago in the Exclusion Zone,...
This article focuses on the 2013–2016 exhibitions in Moscow Manege which were later transformed into...
The article focuses on (re)constructing the local memorial landscape in a post-Soviet military base ...
Since 1945, memories of the Holocaust have gradually faded around the world. Using a combination of ...
This essay explores the relationship between place and memory in the former Gulag periphery of Magad...
This article examines the takeover of the Perm-36 GULAG museum as emblematic of the dynamics of patr...
The paper concerns the issue of representation of historical memory. The museum is analyzed as the p...
Many states in post-communist East-Central Europe have established memorial museums which aim to tel...
This paper discusses Holocaust memorial culture and analyzes how museums, memorials sites, tourism, ...
On January 16, 1945 Grodzisk Mazowiecki, a town 30 kilometers from Warsaw, was bombed by Soviet air...
How can museums pass on the remembrances of the survivors of Holocaust in ways that engage visitors?...
This article examines the commemoration practices of the Gulag in the Russian Federation. On the bas...
This study focuses on nuclear tourism, which flourished a decade ago in the Exclusion Zone, a regime...
The official Soviet narrative of the Second World War used the concept of heroism to imbue war comme...
Germany offers numerous examples of memorial museums, although beyond Berlin they are poorly represe...
CC BY 4.0This study focuses on nuclear tourism, which flourished a decade ago in the Exclusion Zone,...
This article focuses on the 2013–2016 exhibitions in Moscow Manege which were later transformed into...
The article focuses on (re)constructing the local memorial landscape in a post-Soviet military base ...
Since 1945, memories of the Holocaust have gradually faded around the world. Using a combination of ...
This essay explores the relationship between place and memory in the former Gulag periphery of Magad...
This article examines the takeover of the Perm-36 GULAG museum as emblematic of the dynamics of patr...
The paper concerns the issue of representation of historical memory. The museum is analyzed as the p...
Many states in post-communist East-Central Europe have established memorial museums which aim to tel...
This paper discusses Holocaust memorial culture and analyzes how museums, memorials sites, tourism, ...
On January 16, 1945 Grodzisk Mazowiecki, a town 30 kilometers from Warsaw, was bombed by Soviet air...
How can museums pass on the remembrances of the survivors of Holocaust in ways that engage visitors?...