Women mobilizing memory / edited by Ayşe Gül Altinay [and five others].

Other author Altınay, Ayşe Gül, 1971- editor.
Format Electronic
PublicationNew York : Columbia University Press, [2019]
Description1 online resource (xii, 525 pages)
Supplemental ContentProQuest Ebook Central
Subjects

Contents Intro; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Practicing Feminism, Practicing Memory, by Marianne Hirsch; Part I. Disrupting Sites; 1. Stadium Memories: The Estadio Nacional de Chile and the Reshaping of Space through Women's Memory, by Katherine Hite and Marita Sturken; 2. The Metamorphosis of the Museal: From Exhibitionary to Experiential Complex and Beyond, by Andreas Huyssen; 3. Kara Walker: The Memory of Sugar, by Carol Becker
Contents 4. Curious Steps: Mobilizing Memory Through Collective Walking and Storytelling in Istanbul, by Bürge Abiral, Ayşe Gül Altınay, Dilara Çalışkan, and Armanc Yıldız; 5. Pilgrimage As/Or Resistance, by Nancy Kricorian; Part II. Performing Protest; 6. Traumatic Memes, by Diana Taylor; 7. Memory as Encounter: The Saturday Mothers in Turkey, by Meltem Ahıska; 8. Aquí: Performing Mapping Practices in Santiago de Chile, by María José Contreras Lorenzini; 9. #NiUnaMenos (#NotOneWomanLess): Hashtag Performativity, Memory, and Direct Action against Gender Violence in Argentina, by Marcela A. Fuentes
Contents 10. Mobilizing Academic Labor: The Graduate Workers of Columbia Unionization Campaign, by Andrea Crow and Alyssa Greene; 11. "Nobody Is Going To Let You Attend Your Own Funeral": A Funeral for a Trans Woman and Naming the Unnamed, by Dilara Çalışkan; 12. Black Feminist Visions and the Politics of Healing in the Movement for Black Lives, by Deva Woodly; Part III. Interfering Images; 13. Instilling Interference: Lorie Novak's Frequencies in Traumatic Time, by Laura Wexler; 14. Siting Absence: Feminist Photography, State Violence, and the Limits of Representation. by Nicole Gervasio
Contents 15. Carrie Mae Weems: Rehistoricizing Visual Memory, by Deborah Willis; 16. "When Everything Has Been Said Before . . .": Art, Dispossession, and the Economies of Forgetting in Turkey, by Banu Karaca; 17. Treasures, by Silvina Der-Meguerditchian and Marianne Hirsch; 18. Blank: An Attempt at a Conversation, by Susan Meiselas and Işın Önol; Part IV. Staging Resistance; 19. Interventionist Theater: Challenging Regimes of Slow Violence, by Jean E. Howard; 20. Making Memory: Patricia Ariza's and Teresa Ralli's Antígonas, by Leticia Robles-Moreno
Contents 21. Theater of the Mothers: Three Political Plays by Marie NDiaye, by Noémie Ndiaye, 22. Who Knows Where or When?: AIDS and Theatrical Memory in Queer Time, by Alisa Solomon; Part V. Rewriting Lives; 23. El Edificio de los Chilenos (The Building of the Chileans): Heroic Memory Revisited by a Post-Revolutionary Daughter, by Milena Grass Kleiner; 24. Remembering "Possibility": Postmemory and Apocalyptic Hope in Recent Turkish Coup Narratives, by Sibel Irzık; 25. Müfide Ferit Tek's Aydemir Meets Neşide K. Demir, or How Women in Mourning Impede Gendered Memories of a Genocidal Past, by Hülya Adak
Abstract Women Mobilizing Memory, a transnational exploration of the intersection of feminism, history, and memory, shows how the recollection of violent histories can generate possibilities for progressive futures. It emerges from a multiyear feminist collaboration bringing together an interdisciplinary group of scholars, artists, and activists
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index
Source of descriptionOnline resource; title from digital title page (viewed on August 26, 2019).
Issued in other formPrint version: Women mobilizing memory. New York : Columbia University Press, [2019] 9780231191845
Genre/formElectronic books.
LCCN 2019001271
ISBN9780231549974 (electronic book)
ISBN0231549970 (electronic book)
ISBN(hardcover)
ISBN(hardcover)
Stock number22573/ctvppctbv JSTOR

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