Memorylands

Regular price €49.99
A01=Sharon Macdonald
Author_Sharon Macdonald
Cartwright Hall
Category=JHMC
Category=NHD
Category=NK
cosmopolitan
Cosmopolitan Memory
cultural anthropology
Di Lellio
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic analysis
European Historical Consciousness
European memory studies case examples
Folk Life Museums
GDR Citizen
grounds
heritage commodification
historical methodology
Holocaust Commemoration
Holocaust Memorial Day
identity formation
Inalienable Possessions
Indo-Pakistan Sub-continent
Indo-Pakistan Subcontinent
Island Life
Jewish Museum
material culture studies
Memory Phenomenon
Multisited Fieldwork
nazi
Nazi Party Rally Grounds
nostalgia
party
past
Past Tenses
phenomenon
post-socialist
post-Socialist Nostalgia
presencing
rally
Skye Museum
Skye Story
Transcultural Heritage
Turkish Cypriots
Turkish Delight
Vice Versa
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415453349
  • Weight: 538g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Apr 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Memorylands is an original and fascinating investigation of the nature of heritage, memory and understandings of the past in Europe today. It looks at how Europe has become a ’memoryland’ – littered with material reminders of the past, such as museums, heritage sites and memorials; and at how this ‘memory phenomenon’ is related to the changing nature of identities – especially European, national and cosmopolitan. In doing so, it provides new insights into how memory and the past are being performed and reconfigured in Europe – and with what effects.

Drawing especially, though not exclusively, on cases, concepts and arguments from social and cultural anthropology, Memorylands argues for a deeper and more nuanced understanding of the cultural assumptions involved in relating to the past. It theorizes the various ways in which ‘materializations’ of identity work and relates these to different forms of identification within Europe. The book also addresses questions of methodology, including discussion of historical, ethnographic, interdisciplinary and innovative methods. Through a wide-range of case-studies from across Europe, Sharon Macdonald argues that Europe is home to a much greater range of ways of making the past present than is usually realized – and a greater range of forms of ‘historical consciousness’. At the same time, however, she seeks to highlight what she calls ‘the European memory complex’ – a repertoire of prevalent patterns in forms of recollection and ‘past presencing’.

The examples in Memorylands are drawn from both the margins and metropolitan centres, from the relatively small-scale and local, the national and the avant-garde. The book looks at pasts that are potentially identity-disrupting – or ‘difficult’ – as well as those that affirm identities or offer possibilities for transcending national identities or articulating more cosmopolitan futures. Topics covered include authenticity, temporalities, embodiment, commodification, nostalgia and Ostalgie, the musealization of everyday and folk-life, Holocaust commemoration and tourism, narratives of war, the heritage of Islam, transnationalism, and the future of the past.

Memorylands is engagingly written and accessible to general readers as well as offering a new synthesis for advanced researchers in memory and heritage studies. It is essential reading for those interested in identities, memory, material culture, Europe, tourism and heritage.

Sharon Macdonald is Anniversary Professor of Cultural Anthropology at the University of York, UK and Visiting Professor in the Institute of European Ethnology, Humboldt University, Berlin. Her authored books include Difficult Heritage (Routledge, 2008) and Reimagining Culture, and, as editor, The Politics of Display (Routledge, 1997) and The Companion to Museum Studies (Choice Outstanding Academic Title, 2007).