Memorialization of valor and losses through war memorials unquestioningly presume that material objects stand for and embody memory. In exploring this relationship, this article focuses on the evocation of mourning and melancholia in the annual commemorations at the site of two war memorials dedicated to the Martyred Intellectuals of the Bangladesh War of 1971. Following a discussion of the increased ethnographic reconceptualization of culture in spatialized ways, the article examines the role of the built environment in simulating an emotional experience for its visitors. The article argues that the different evocations of mourning and melancholia at these memorials are a reflection of the middle-class aesthetics and the political trajecto...
Experiential memorials are agents of memory, constructing experiences for visitors that evoke memory...
The most important and celebrated chapter in the history of Bangladesh is its nine-month long Libera...
Where once geographers could argue that the ideological and aesthetic issues surrounding the militar...
This presentation seeks to ethnographically explore the affective aesthetics in Dhaka, Bangladesh, w...
The “cultural turn” in memory studies acknowledges that collective memory has a distinctive social a...
Background: Sarajevo Red Line, a memorial event held on 6 April 2012, was organized to commemorate t...
This research examines how destruction and government-led tourist-centric reconstruction of Buddhist...
This edited collection attends to the locations of memory along and about the Indo-Pakistan and Indo...
This chapter is concerned with the disruptive potential of memory in peacebuilding processes where a...
This article examines an attempt to build a memorial to local victims of civil war in South Sudan. T...
What happens when a monumental thing is physically destroyed? Is its “life” as a socially significan...
The Liberation War of 1971 (Muktijuddho in Bengali) is the most significant and celebrated event in ...
War memory and commemoration have had increasingly high profiles in public and academic debates in r...
This book bridges theoretical gaps that exist between the meta-concepts of memory, place and identit...
This article adopts a phenomenological, ethnographic approach to examine place consumption and place...
Experiential memorials are agents of memory, constructing experiences for visitors that evoke memory...
The most important and celebrated chapter in the history of Bangladesh is its nine-month long Libera...
Where once geographers could argue that the ideological and aesthetic issues surrounding the militar...
This presentation seeks to ethnographically explore the affective aesthetics in Dhaka, Bangladesh, w...
The “cultural turn” in memory studies acknowledges that collective memory has a distinctive social a...
Background: Sarajevo Red Line, a memorial event held on 6 April 2012, was organized to commemorate t...
This research examines how destruction and government-led tourist-centric reconstruction of Buddhist...
This edited collection attends to the locations of memory along and about the Indo-Pakistan and Indo...
This chapter is concerned with the disruptive potential of memory in peacebuilding processes where a...
This article examines an attempt to build a memorial to local victims of civil war in South Sudan. T...
What happens when a monumental thing is physically destroyed? Is its “life” as a socially significan...
The Liberation War of 1971 (Muktijuddho in Bengali) is the most significant and celebrated event in ...
War memory and commemoration have had increasingly high profiles in public and academic debates in r...
This book bridges theoretical gaps that exist between the meta-concepts of memory, place and identit...
This article adopts a phenomenological, ethnographic approach to examine place consumption and place...
Experiential memorials are agents of memory, constructing experiences for visitors that evoke memory...
The most important and celebrated chapter in the history of Bangladesh is its nine-month long Libera...
Where once geographers could argue that the ideological and aesthetic issues surrounding the militar...