Memory is key to understanding the temporal-spatial coordinates of producing ‘crisis’ and acting in it. By reshaping infrastructures of past, present, and future, and interlinking places and spaces of crisis, memory often appears to be instrumental for proclaiming, experiencing, and responding to states of emergency.This chapter scrutinizes the varied workings of memory in/of crises by examining mnemonic chronotopes and exploring their potential as conceptual figures. Thinking about crises through chronotopes of memory, that is, temporal-spatial frameworks of recall involved in imagining and narrating, can reveal the mechanisms behind cycles of oppression (spaces marked as sites of perpetual crises; times of dispossession conceived as etern...
This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory practices are used to dea...
This study is a critical engagement with the preemptive turn in post-biopolitical governance in psyc...
In this article, I argue that the concept of crisis entails a particular form of experiencing and th...
Memory is key to understanding the temporal-spatial coordinates of producing ‘crisis’ and acting in ...
This collectively written essay in four parts makes an original contribution to crisis research by e...
The attraction of crises keeps going an entire sector of the media industry. Authors, painters, phot...
Crisis has no end. Or at least, it might seem like it, with the term ‘crisis’ qualifying all spheres...
The panel addresses the theme of the “familiar/strange” from the spatial and temporal perspectives a...
This article makes a theoretical contribution to the constructivist and cultural political economy l...
How does the type of disaster affect the learning among key stakeholder groups? This chapter provide...
International audienceThis paper aims to address the spatiality of disaster memory and show how disa...
© The author(s) 2021. This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory pra...
The last decades of the twentieth century and the beginning of the new millennium have been marked b...
This open access book provides a concise introduction to a critical development in memory studies. A...
This paper aims to address the spatiality of disaster memory and show how disaster memory transforms...
This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory practices are used to dea...
This study is a critical engagement with the preemptive turn in post-biopolitical governance in psyc...
In this article, I argue that the concept of crisis entails a particular form of experiencing and th...
Memory is key to understanding the temporal-spatial coordinates of producing ‘crisis’ and acting in ...
This collectively written essay in four parts makes an original contribution to crisis research by e...
The attraction of crises keeps going an entire sector of the media industry. Authors, painters, phot...
Crisis has no end. Or at least, it might seem like it, with the term ‘crisis’ qualifying all spheres...
The panel addresses the theme of the “familiar/strange” from the spatial and temporal perspectives a...
This article makes a theoretical contribution to the constructivist and cultural political economy l...
How does the type of disaster affect the learning among key stakeholder groups? This chapter provide...
International audienceThis paper aims to address the spatiality of disaster memory and show how disa...
© The author(s) 2021. This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory pra...
The last decades of the twentieth century and the beginning of the new millennium have been marked b...
This open access book provides a concise introduction to a critical development in memory studies. A...
This paper aims to address the spatiality of disaster memory and show how disaster memory transforms...
This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory practices are used to dea...
This study is a critical engagement with the preemptive turn in post-biopolitical governance in psyc...
In this article, I argue that the concept of crisis entails a particular form of experiencing and th...