Lexington Books
Pages: 166
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7391-7630-6 • Hardback • December 2014 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7391-7631-3 • eBook • December 2014 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
Brigitte Sion is a post-doctoral researcher affiliated with Columbia University and the MATRICE Research Institute in Paris. She has written extensively on the global politics of memory and commemorative practices, particularly in Germany, Argentina, Cambodia, Poland, and France.
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe and the Parque de la Memoria in Historical Context
Chapter 2: Commemorating Absent Bodies
Chapter 3: Self-Indicting Monuments
Chapter 4: Embodied Memory
Chapter 5: Death Tourism and Architourism
Chapter 6: Multitasking Memorials
Conclusion
Monuments address the past, but they also have a future, as Brigitte Sion demonstrates in her thoughtful analysis of two public memory sites that recall brutal acts of state-run mass terror. This detailed, thoroughly researched study raises key questions for considering the afterlife of memorials. Sion attends carefully to the uniqueness of each memorial, while also teasing out issues common to both, especially as public spaces dedicated to addressing a nation’s own past crimes.
— Jeffrey Shandler, Rutgers University
In the current surge of memory studies, this account of the Monument to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin and the Park of Memory in Buenos Aires stands out for its impeccable attention to detail, sophisticated argument, and incisive style. How do memorials to victims of state terrorism work; who are they for; what exactly do they do? The author not only poses these questions; she answers them. Before your next visit to a commemorative site, you’ll be glad to have read this book.
— Carol Gluck, Columbia University
Embodied memory in the absence of bodies—this is the starting point for Brigitte Sion’s thorough and sensitive analysis of the Monument to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin and the Parque de la Memoria in Buenos Aires. Worlds apart, they find common ground in what has become an almost universal tool box of commemorative practices. Sion offers a brilliant analysis of those tools and their deployment in similar yet different situations. By considering not only the birth of monuments, but also their life ever after, Sion has made a major contribution to the burgeoning field of memory studies.
— Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, New York University
Brigitte Sion has written a smart, synthetic, and eminently readable multilayered analysis of both commemorative representation and reception. Grounded in a close study of the largely contrasting approaches to two major commemorative projects, the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin and the Parque de la Memoria in Buenos Aires, Sion skillfully teases out the ways in which public art and architecture attempt to satisfy ‘‘the tension between the absent bodies of victims and the embodied practices of visitors’’ (xiii). Sion brings her multidisciplinary training and her multilingualism to parse the two cases’ fitful commemorative processes. She also explores the ways in which different kinds of visitors respond to the sites.
Memorials in Berlin and Buenos Aires provides adequate historical context, both about the countries themselves and in terms of the evolution of the memorial form. Sion then conceptualizes each memorial as a performance site in which form and meaning, and mourning and tourism are at play with those who are absent due to violence and those who are now present as visitors. Each chapter interweaves description and analysis of the two sites, which makes for a dynamic and fluid read.
— The Public Historian