Memorials matter : emotion, environment, and public memory at American historical sites

書誌事項

Memorials matter : emotion, environment, and public memory at American historical sites

Jennifer K. Ladino

University of Nevada Press, c2019

  • : pbk

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注記

Summary: "Memorials Matter investigates how sites of memory in the American West influence emotions about historical conflict and national identity. The book compares seven diverse National Park Service sites to show how the natural landscapes and built structures combine with written texts at each site to generate emotion in individual tourists and shape our collective memory of traumatic events"--Provided by publisher

Bibliography: p. 277-286

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

From the sculptured peaks of Mount Rushmore to the Coloradan prairie lands at Sand Creek to the idyllic islands of the Pacific, the West's signature environments add a new dimension to the study of memorials. In such diverse and often dramatic landscapes, how do the natural and built environments shape our emotions? In Memorials Matter, author Jennifer Ladino investigates the natural and physical environments of seven diverse National Park Service (NPS) sites in the American West and how they influence emotions about historical conflict and national identity. Chapters center around the region's diverse inhabitants (Mexican, Chinese, Japanese, African, and Native Americans) and the variously traumatic histories these groups endured-histories of oppression, exploitation, incarceration, slavery, and genocide. Drawing on material ecocritical theory, Ladino emphasizes the ideological and political importance of memorials and how they evoke visceral responses that are not always explicitly 'storied,' but nevertheless matter in powerful ways. In this unique blend of narrative scholarship and critical theory, Ladino demonstrates how these memorial sites and their surrounding landscapes, combined with written texts, generate emotion and shape our collective memory of traumatic events. She urges us to consider our everyday environments and to become attuned to features and feelings we might have otherwise overlooked.

目次

Table of Contents Preface xi Introduction: Feeling Like a Mountain: Scale, Patriotism, and Affective Agency at Mount Rushmore National Memorial 1 1. "Fears Made Manifest": Desert Creatures and Border Anxiety at Coronado National Memorial 41 2. Placing Historical Trauma: Guilt, Regret, and Compassion at Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site 82 3. Performing Patriotism: Reenactment, Historicity, and Thing-Power at Golden Spike National Historic Site 121 4. Remembering War in Paradise: Grief, Aloha, and Techno-patriotism at WWII Valor in the Pacific National Monument 157 5. Mountains, Monuments, and other Matter: Reckoning with Racism and Simulating Shame at Manzanar National Historic Site 195 6. "We have died. Remember us.": Fear, Wonder, and Overlooking the Buffalo Soldiers at Golden Gate National Recreation Area 227 Postscript: Going Rogue with the Alt-NPS: Managing Love and Hate for an Alternative Anthropocene 261 Acknowledgments 275 Bibliography 277 Index 287 About the Author 297

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