Beschreibung
InhaltsangabePart I: Theoretical considerations: Communicative and Cultural Memory: Jan Assmann, Memory and Space in the Work of Maurice Halbwachs: David Middleton, Steven D. Brown, Disparities between Knowledge and Collective Memories: Peter Meusburger, Part II: Case Studies, The Rütli in Switzerland: minor memory - major ambition: Georg Kreis, Sharing Space? Geography and Politics in Post-conflict Northern Ireland: Brian Graham, Memory-Recollection-Culture-Identity-Space: Social Context, Identity Formation, and Self-construction of the Calé (Gitanos) in Spain: Christina West, Part III: World War II in European Cultural Memories: Seven Circles of European Memory: Claus Leggewie, Halecki Revisited: Europe's Conflicting Cultures of Remembrance: Stefan Troebst, "Remembering for whom? Concepts for memorials in Western Europe": Rainer Eckert, Family Memories of World War II and the Holocaust in Europe, or Is There a European Memory?: Harald Welzer, Annihilating-Preserving-Remembering: The "Aryanization" of Jewish History and Memory during the Holocaust: Dirk Rupnow, History/Archive/Memory: A Historical Geography of the U.S. Naval Memorial in Brest, France: Michael Heffernan, Places and Spaces: The Remembrance of D-Day 1944 in Normandy: Sandra Petermann, "Doors into Nowhere": Dead Cities and the Natural History of Destruction: Derek Gregory, Part IV: Postcolonial Cultural Memories, Violent Memories: South Asian Spaces of Postcolonial Anamnesis: Stephen Legg, Spacing Forgetting: The Birth of the Museum at Fort Jesus, Mombasa, and the Legacies of the Colonization of Memory in Kenya: Denis Linehan, Joao Sarmento: Part V: Pre-modern Cultural Memories: Landscape, Transformations and Immutability in an Aboriginal Australian Culture: Robert Tonkinson, Person, Space, and Memory. Why Anthropology needs Cognitive Science and Human Geography: Jürg Wassmann, Abstracts of the Contributions, The Klaus Tschira Foundation, Index