2007-2008 dissertation submitted for the MA in Cultural Memory at the Institute of Germanic and Romance Studies (IGRS). Supervisor: Dr Richard Crownsha
My dissertation examines the manner in which 9/11 has been formulated as a historical sequence of ev...
This article explores the endurance of the pervasive framing of “9/11” as a moment of temporal ruptu...
Subject offers a cross-cultural and trans-historical perspective on the problems of catastrophe and ...
Presented to the 10th Annual Symposium on Graduate Research and Scholarly Projects (GRASP) held at ...
Fromme M, Kirchhof C, Wait AR. Re-Membering the Terrorist Spectacle: Medial Discourses, the Shaping ...
This dissertation is a reflection on how loss was articulated in the wake of 9/11. The terror attack...
9/11 fictional literature shows a striking propensity to conjure up other, historically older trauma...
From the oval office to town halls, from the television screen to the archive, Americans sought to d...
This dissertation explores the emergent cultural aftereffects of September 11, 2001. I consider how ...
The turn towards transculturalism engenders a focus on modes of remembrance that conceptualise memor...
In the last decades, terrorist attacks have been more pervading in many countries. Because of the fe...
9/11 will always be a traumatic experience not only for Americans but also for the rest of the world...
Marking ‘Time Zero’ in the history of the US and the world, the 9/11 catastrophe provoked an outburs...
Graduation date: 2015Over the past fourteen years since the attacks on the World Trade Center on\ud ...
This dissertation traces the emergence of 9/11 memory as it is shaped in relation to the event\u27s ...
My dissertation examines the manner in which 9/11 has been formulated as a historical sequence of ev...
This article explores the endurance of the pervasive framing of “9/11” as a moment of temporal ruptu...
Subject offers a cross-cultural and trans-historical perspective on the problems of catastrophe and ...
Presented to the 10th Annual Symposium on Graduate Research and Scholarly Projects (GRASP) held at ...
Fromme M, Kirchhof C, Wait AR. Re-Membering the Terrorist Spectacle: Medial Discourses, the Shaping ...
This dissertation is a reflection on how loss was articulated in the wake of 9/11. The terror attack...
9/11 fictional literature shows a striking propensity to conjure up other, historically older trauma...
From the oval office to town halls, from the television screen to the archive, Americans sought to d...
This dissertation explores the emergent cultural aftereffects of September 11, 2001. I consider how ...
The turn towards transculturalism engenders a focus on modes of remembrance that conceptualise memor...
In the last decades, terrorist attacks have been more pervading in many countries. Because of the fe...
9/11 will always be a traumatic experience not only for Americans but also for the rest of the world...
Marking ‘Time Zero’ in the history of the US and the world, the 9/11 catastrophe provoked an outburs...
Graduation date: 2015Over the past fourteen years since the attacks on the World Trade Center on\ud ...
This dissertation traces the emergence of 9/11 memory as it is shaped in relation to the event\u27s ...
My dissertation examines the manner in which 9/11 has been formulated as a historical sequence of ev...
This article explores the endurance of the pervasive framing of “9/11” as a moment of temporal ruptu...
Subject offers a cross-cultural and trans-historical perspective on the problems of catastrophe and ...