ACME Vol 21 No 5 Special Issue: Monumentality, Memoryscapes, and the Politics of Place is Now Online!

2022-11-22
ACME Vol 21 No 5 Special Issue: Monumentality, Memoryscapes, and the Politics of Place 


Monumentality, Memoryscapes, and the Politics of Place

Reuben Rose-Redwood
Department of Geography, University of Victoria
Ian G. Baird
Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin–Madison
Emilia Palonen
Department of Political and Economic Studies, University of Helsinki
CindyAnn Rose-Redwood
Department of Geography, University of Victoria

Truth-Telling and Memory-Work in Montgomery’s Co-Constituted Landscapes

Anna Livia Brand
Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning, University of California Berkeley
Joshua F. Inwood
Department of Geography, Pennsylvania State University
Derek Alderman
Department of Geography, University of Tennessee

Engendered in Stone: The Role of Race and Gender in the Construction and Removal of Confederate Monuments in Tampa, Florida

Sam(antha) Bowden Akbari
Department of Geography, Rutgers University
Stephen McFarland
Department of History, Sociology, Geography, and Legal Studies, University of Tampa
M. Martin Bosman
Department of GeoSciences, Geography Division, University of South Florida

Meaning Falls Apart: Anagrammatical Blackness and Memorialization at the Museum

Bradley Hinger
Department of Geography, The Pennsylvania State University

Dead Labor: Fetishizing Chattel Slavery at Contemporary Southern Plantation Tourism Sites

Matthew Russell Cook
Geography and Geology, Eastern Michigan University
Candace Forbes Bright
Department of Sociology & Anthropology, East Tennessee State University
Perry L. Carter
Department of Geosciences, Texas Tech University
E. Arnold Modlin
Department of History & Interdisciplinary Studies, Norfolk State University

Decolonizing Memory Work? Textual Politics of Settler State Historical Markers Engaging Indigenous Peoples in Kansas

Chris W. Post
Department of Geography, Kent State University
Mark A. Rhodes II
Social Sciences, Michigan Tech University

A Stone Left Unturned: Landscape, Race, and Memory at the Gila River War Relocation Center

Adrian N. Mulligan
Geography Department, Bucknell University

The Commemorative Landscape as a Space of Anti-Racist Activism: Confronting the Legacies of Anti-Japanese Canadian Racism on Vancouver Island

Ian G. Baird
Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin–Madison

Making the Millet Common: Rethinking Authoritarian Politics Through Commemoration Following Turkey’s July 2016 Coup Attempt

Timur Hammond
Department of Geography and the Environment, Syracuse University