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Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Memorial
Museums: The Emergence of a New
Form
2 The US
Holocaust Memorial Museum: The Creation of a “Living Memorial”
3 The House
of Terror: “The Only One of Its
Kind”
4 The Kigali
Genocide Memorial Centre: Building a “Lasting Peace”
5 The Museum
of Memory and Human Rights: “A Living Museum for Chile’s
Memory”
6 The
National September 11 Memorial Museum: “To Bear Solemn Witness”
7 Memorial
Museums: Promises and
Limits
Notes
Bibliography
Index
AMY SODARO is an associate professor of sociology at the Borough of Manhattan Community College, The City University of New York. She is coeditor of Memory and the Future: Transnational Politics, Ethics and Culture.
"This intelligent and cogently-constructed narrative is a
significant addition to the growing literature on public
commemoration over the past fifty years." - Jay Winter (coeditor of
War and Remembrance in the Twentieth Century) "This intelligent and
cogently-constructed narrative is a significant addition to
the growing literature on public commemoration over the past fifty
years." - Jay Winter (coeditor of War and Remembrance in the
Twentieth Century) "Exhibiting Atrocity is an ambitious,
significant study providing in-depth case studies of three
memorial museums and how they attempt to narrate 'difficult
history' and navigate the politics of memory. Accessible and
wide-ranging, this interdisciplinary volume is an important, timely
resource for students as well as specialists." - Joyce Apsel
(author of Introducing Peace Museums) "Exhibiting Atrocity is an
ambitious, significant study providing in-depth case studies
of three memorial museums and how they attempt to narrate
'difficult history' and navigate the politics of memory. Accessible
and wide-ranging, this interdisciplinary volume is an important,
timely resource for students as well as specialists." - Joyce
Apsel (author of Introducing Peace Museums) “An original and unique
study…Exhibiting Atrocity: Memorial Museums and the Politics of
Past Violence is an especially and unreservedly recommended
addition to both community and academic library Human Rights and
Cultural History collections [and] Museum Studies supplemental
reading lists.”
(Midwest Book Review) “An original and unique
study…Exhibiting Atrocity: Memorial Museums and the Politics of
Past Violence is an especially and unreservedly recommended
addition to both community and academic library Human Rights and
Cultural History collections [and] Museum Studies supplemental
reading lists.”
(Midwest Book Review) "Sodaro examines how many communities,
be they groups or countries, work through staggering events like
9/11 by building museums to parse through them." (SUM) "Sodaro
examines how many communities, be they groups or countries, work
through staggering events like 9/11 by building museums to parse
through them." (SUM) "Exhibiting Atrocity sets a precedent that
will allow researchers and visitors to recognize these museums for
the political projects that they really are – neither good nor bad
but always potentially very dangerous. The greatest danger inherent
in the ways in which memorial museums exhibit atrocity is that they
routinely fail to expose the fragility, vulnerability and
precariousness of political systems and norms. This leaves us
vulnerable to manipulation, demagoguery, and the authoritarian
personalities lying in wait." (European Journal of Cultural and
Political Socioloy) "Exhibiting Atrocity sets a precedent that will
allow researchers and visitors to recognize these museums for the
political projects that they really are – neither good nor bad but
always potentially very dangerous. The greatest danger inherent in
the ways in which memorial museums exhibit atrocity is that they
routinely fail to expose the fragility, vulnerability and
precariousness of political systems and norms. This leaves us
vulnerable to manipulation, demagoguery, and the authoritarian
personalities lying in wait." (European Journal of Cultural and
Political Socioloy) "A welcome addition to a growing body of
literature within memory studies that examines the global turn in
using museums to commemorate past mass atrocities. This book
demonstrates that there is much more research to be done and offers
inquiring minds a useful starting point." (Memory Studies)
"A welcome addition to a growing body of literature within
memory studies that examines the global turn in using museums to
commemorate past mass atrocities. This book demonstrates that there
is much more research to be done and offers inquiring minds a
useful starting point." (Memory Studies) New Books Network: New
Books in Jewish Studies interview with Amy Sodaro (New Books
Network: New Books in Jewish Studies) New Books Network: New Books
in Jewish Studies interview with Amy Sodaro (New Books Network: New
Books in Jewish Studies)
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