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dc.contributor.editorSLUGA, Glenda
dc.contributor.editorDARIAN-SMITH, Kate
dc.contributor.editorHERREN-OESCH, Madeleine
dc.date.accessioned2024-07-19T10:47:22Z
dc.date.available2024-07-19T10:47:22Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier.citationPennsylvania : University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023en
dc.identifier.isbn9781512824056
dc.identifier.isbn9781512824063
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/77076
dc.descriptionPublished: 12 September 2023en
dc.description.abstractWhether we think of statues, plaques, street-names, practices, material or intangible forms of remembrance, the language of collective memory is everywhere, installed in the name of not only nations, or even empires, but also an international past. The essays in Sites of International Memory address the notion of a shared past, and how this idea is promulgated through sites and commemorative gestures that create or promote cultural memory of such global issues as wars, genocide, and movements of cross-national trade and commerce, as well as resistance and revolution. In doing so, this edited collection asks: Where are the sites of international memory? What are the elements of such memories of international pasts, and of internationalism? How and why have we remembered or forgotten "sites" of international memory? Which elements of these international pasts are useful in the present? Some contributors address specific sites and moments-World War II, liberation movements in India and Ethiopia, commemorations of genocide-while other pieces concentrate more on the theoretical, on the idea of cultural memory. UNESCO's presence looms large in the volume, as it is the most visible and iconic international organization devoted to creating critical heritage studies on a world stage. Formed in the aftermath of World War II, UNESCO was instrumental in promoting the idea of a "humanity" that exists beyond national, regional, or cultural borders or definitions. Since then, UNESCO's diplomatic and institutional channels have become the sites at which competing notions of international, world, and "human" communities have jostled in conjunction with politically specific understandings of cultural value and human rights. This volume has been assembled to investigate sites of international memory that commemorate a past when it was possible to imagine, identify, and invoke "international" ideas, institutions, and experiences, in diverse, historically situated contexts.en
dc.description.tableofcontents-- 1. Sites of international memory -- PART I. From national to international sites of memory -- 2. Palimpsests: national, international, and transnational sites of memory -- 3. The Nansen passport as site of international and exilic memory -- Part II. From imperial to postcolonial sites of international memory-making -- 4. The Boxer war and international memory -- 5. The Arctic: memory beyond territoriality? -- 6. Antarctica and the stratigraphy of international memory -- 7. “I seem to hear the camel bells”: Xi Jinping’s new silk road and the politics of the Belt-and-Road initiative as a future global memory of illiberal internationalism -- Part III. City-sites of international memory -- 8. Revolutionary roads: tashkent as a site of Indian internationalism -- 9. Cosmopolitan, global, international? New York’s material sites of memory and forgetting -- 10. Rediscovering the total liberation of Africa: recalling Addis Ababa as a site of African internationalism -- 11. Greening our common fate: Stockholm as a node of global environmental memory -- Part IV. Memory-making and multilateral institutions -- 12. Absent Memory and Abundant Present of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights -- 13. International Conflict, National Pasts, and UNESCO World Heritage and Memory of the World -- 14. Internationalism from the Inside: The Women of the United Nations Secretariat in New Yorken
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherUniversity of Pennsylvania Pressen
dc.relation.hasparthttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/77077en
dc.titleSites of international memoryen
dc.typeBooken
dc.identifier.doi10.2307/j.ctv2zjz7d9


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