TY - GEN T1 - Calling memory into place A1 - Apel, Dora, 1952- LA - English PP - New Brunswick PB - Rutgers University Press YR - 2020 UL - https://ebooks.jgu.edu.in/Record/ebsco_acadsubs_on1178784212 AB - "Calling Memory into Place offers a unique mix of cultural and political critique combined with memoir and family history in order to explore issues of cultural memory and identity. Focusing on the overlapping themes of intergenerational Holocaust trauma, racial violence, and gendered experience, Apel shows how cultural representations intersect with the experience of place and embodied knowledge as important ways of knowing. By investigating the relations among place, memory, and identity, this study shines a light on the dynamic nature of memory as it crosses geography and generations, demonstrating how cultural narratives rewrite an understanding of the self as well as group and national identity. In ten essays, Apel examines the ongoing construction of memory through memorials, photographs, artworks, and personal stories that open up a process of "unforgetting"--Remembering what was formerly considered unworthy of being remembered or reinterpreting the meaning of the past. These essays explore the protests in Ferguson following the police killing of Michael Brown, the controversy over a painting of Emmett Till in the Whitney Biennial, and debates about a national lynching memorial in Montgomery, Alabama, as well as the contested politics of place during a visit to Israel/Palestine, a return to the hometown in Poland of the author's Holocaust survivor parents, a memorial for philosopher Walter Benjamin in Spain, and the constructive uses of inherited trauma in the author's breast cancer treatment and struggle for self-advocacy in the patriarchal medical institution, among other topics. By shifting between the scholarly, the personal, and the visual as different ways of knowing, these essays perform in practice an attention to the political and affective dimensions of trauma, memory, and place, demonstrating the need to remember the repressed and marginalized voices of the past in the struggle for equality and social justice in the present"-- OP - 251 CN - BF371 .A54 2020 SN - 9781978807853 SN - 1978807856 SN - 9781978807877 SN - 1978807872 SN - 9781978807839 SN - 197880783X SN - 9781978807846 SN - 1978807848 KW - Collective memory. KW - Memory : Political aspects. KW - Memory : Social aspects. KW - Memory : Psychological aspects. KW - Mémoire collective. KW - ART / General. KW - Collective memory KW - Memory : Political aspects KW - Memory : Psychological aspects KW - Memory : Social aspects KW - Memory, Traumatic Memory, Photographs, Artworks, Autobiographies, Stories, Unforgetting, Perspective, Holocaust, Survivors, Intersectionality, Racism, Antisemitism, Sexism, Trauma, History, Identity, Geography, Generations, Essays, Visuals, Personal Stories. KW - Electronic books. ER -