This article explores the puzzle of victim dissatisfaction with State-led commemoration following 9/11 and 3/11 by offering a cross-national case study through which to view key areas of theoretical debate in the sociology of human rights, cultural trauma and collective memory, and the politics of victimhood. Although State-led commemorative processes are often highly contested, we would expect them to be less so in the cases of 9/11 and 3/11, given broad social consensus about the victims’ right to commemoration and the traumatic nature of the events, and especially the “ideal nature” of the victims who as symbolic representatives of the State are conferred with great moral authority. Drawing on primary and secondary data on the commemorat...
In this article we examine the relationship between standards and subjectivity in the context of com...
How does terrorism affect our picture of the history of terrorism then, if the victims are moved cen...
Presented to the 10th Annual Symposium on Graduate Research and Scholarly Projects (GRASP) held at ...
We apply a cultural psychology approach to collective memory of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In parti...
Spontaneous memorials emerging after an unexpected trauma or loss are certainly not a novel phenomen...
Producing large-scale victimization is one of the prime goals of terrorists worldwide. A regular cha...
Memorials and commemorations typically reinforce narratives that create and support group identity a...
Producing large-scale victimization is one of the prime goals of terrorists worldwide. A regular cha...
The turn towards transculturalism engenders a focus on modes of remembrance that conceptualise memor...
Terrorism and atrocities have scarred the public memory in the late twentieth and early twenty-...
Whilst the interest of memory scholars in political violence and more specifically in terrorism is n...
This article addresses one concern that is central to much of the sociology of memory currently ongo...
In this article we examine the relationship between standards and subjectivity in the context of com...
This chapter complicates many of the assumed benefits of commemorative sites in post-conflict contex...
Among the commemorations that marked the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11t...
In this article we examine the relationship between standards and subjectivity in the context of com...
How does terrorism affect our picture of the history of terrorism then, if the victims are moved cen...
Presented to the 10th Annual Symposium on Graduate Research and Scholarly Projects (GRASP) held at ...
We apply a cultural psychology approach to collective memory of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In parti...
Spontaneous memorials emerging after an unexpected trauma or loss are certainly not a novel phenomen...
Producing large-scale victimization is one of the prime goals of terrorists worldwide. A regular cha...
Memorials and commemorations typically reinforce narratives that create and support group identity a...
Producing large-scale victimization is one of the prime goals of terrorists worldwide. A regular cha...
The turn towards transculturalism engenders a focus on modes of remembrance that conceptualise memor...
Terrorism and atrocities have scarred the public memory in the late twentieth and early twenty-...
Whilst the interest of memory scholars in political violence and more specifically in terrorism is n...
This article addresses one concern that is central to much of the sociology of memory currently ongo...
In this article we examine the relationship between standards and subjectivity in the context of com...
This chapter complicates many of the assumed benefits of commemorative sites in post-conflict contex...
Among the commemorations that marked the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11t...
In this article we examine the relationship between standards and subjectivity in the context of com...
How does terrorism affect our picture of the history of terrorism then, if the victims are moved cen...
Presented to the 10th Annual Symposium on Graduate Research and Scholarly Projects (GRASP) held at ...