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Ephemeral monument to Gigi Meroni in Corso Re Umberto, Torino.

Recent Updates

The 90th Anniversary...
I attend many memorial events as a participant-observer....
mhatlie - Mon Nov 17, 10:53
I agree it is not a surprise...
There was _some_ attention paid to WW1 in the press,...
mhatlie - Sun Nov 16, 15:27
no time for remembering
I have to say, I don’t find the lack of interest...
Michael Prince (anonymous) - Sun Nov 16, 09:46
New marker for deserters...
Last July, the Tübingen city council voted to...
mhatlie - Fri Nov 14, 12:22
Dial-a-Memory
Munich, the one-time „capitol of the movement“...
KMPRINCE - Mon Oct 6, 09:51

About this blog

Wednesday, 13. February 2008

K. Michael Prince...

K. Michael Prince, an American living in Munich, Germany, has joined the "Sites of Memory" blog team. He is the author of "Rally 'round the Flag, Boys".

Thursday, 4. October 2007

Random images...

For the time being at least, I have put in the "random image" function on the left hand side of this blog. The images are not from the stories in the blog. Instead, I use some of the best photographs from sites-of-memory.de. If you see an image you are curious about, write me an e-mail and I will tell you where to find out more about it.

The "random image" function does not let me make the pictures into links, unfortunately.

Monday, 2. April 2007

Eleanor Chiari joins "Sites of Memory"

Dr Eleanor Chiari from University College London and the Institute of Germanic and Romance Studies at the University of London School of Advanced Studies has joined the team of bloggers.

Her interdisciplinary research interests center on cultural memory, material culture and oral history. She has specialized in the social and cultural history of the city of Turin (with a particular focus on the 19th and 20th century; on the history and representation of the Second World War; mass migrations; the anni di piombo ). Her oral history research has addressed questions of collective forgetting, civil war, trauma and state violence. Her articles, based on research she conducted for her recently completed PhD, relate to prisons, memory and space, dark tourism and the consumption of violence. She is currently preparing her dissertation for publication.

Thursday, 29. March 2007

New Authors...

I recently posted a link to the call for authors in the h-memory discussion group. This blog has been getting dozens and dozens of hits since. So far, we have gotten a few inquiries from potential authors. I am corresponding with them now.

Please write if you are interested!

Thursday, 22. February 2007

Call for Authors...

Would you like to help document commemorative culture and collective memory by blogging it in real time?

To increase the quality and diversity of the articles presented in this blog, I am calling for contributors to join me and write stories. Collaborators should have an interest in memorial culture from an academically-informed perspective. If you are interested in joining the team, you should be familiar with some of the recent scholarship on collective memory, for example the kinds of work listed here. Furthermore, you should be following, perhaps only peripherally, memorial culture in real time and be willing to write occasional stories for the blog:
  • reports, analysis, commentary on commemorative events you witness or read about
  • reports on scholarly news from the field
  • brief book reviews or links to book reviews and other resources on new popular and scholarly literature related to the topic
  • commentary on cultural events such as films and books as they relate to the theme
  • other items of interest
A blog resembles journalism more than scholarship, so stories should be current, brief, and understandable to the general reader. There would be no obligation to write regularly, but a general expectation to write occasionally.

The goal is to make the blog into a collaborative intellectual effort bridging the gap between the academic and the popular with diverse content while raising the quality above the level I have been offering so far. It is not my expectation that this become a full-time scholarly project.

If we get some more collaborators, preferably in diverse geographic locations, I will personally fund an upgrade for the blog so that we can organize and present the content in a more purposeful and professional fashion.

The URL for this story is: http://sitesofmemory.twoday.net/stories/3292131/

Saturday, 20. May 2006

Echoes from the present...



A few weeks ago I was contacted by the sister of someone whose memorial is on one of my webpages. The memorial is on Patch Barracks, not accessable to the general public. She called to thank me for the pictures and tell me how happy the family had been to find them online. She had been at the dedication of the memorial in the late 1990s, but had not been able to return to the site.

Yesterday I received an e-mail from someone in Norway looking for the buriel site of someone from their family who had died at the concentration camp cemetery in Vaihingen/Enz (image). I am trying to get in touch with an institution that can help.

On the one hand I am quite happy about these contacts. It is encouraging to see how my site can be relevant to people's lives. On the other hand, such contacts will inevitably remain intermittant. I am not systematically collecting the names of the dead memorialized at the sites I visit, so searches for names will rarely lead to my site. When people do show up looking for help, I cannot promise to go back to sites on the webpage and look for particular gravesites. I will help where I can, especially on nearby sites, but to do so systematically or thoroughly or routinely would open up a whole new dimension to my work and serve a totally different intent from what I set out to do.

Organizations like the Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge or webpages such as Michael Southwell-Keely's collection of war memorials in Australia serve the purpose of recording the biographically-relevant details of memorial culture and perpetuating it online much better than I can. There, all the information is collected and people can systematically search for information about their family members.

Tuesday, 1. November 2005

A new blog for a new website...

Today the new name and new look for Mark R. Hatlie's "places and monuments" webpage went online as "Sites of Memory." That site needs a blog to record changes and comments and this is that blog.

The name "Sites of Memory" stems from the book by historian Jay Winter, "Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning" about cultures of memory after the First World War. Any google search, however, will show you that the term is in quite common use in a variety of social studies contexts. Instead of searching desperately for an original title, I thought it would be better to use a title that people would recognize and immediately understand. The purpose of the site is academic and educational. Students and academics can go to the site and find information and photographs on cultures and memory associated with particular places. There, I am cataloging places of memory that I encounter or seek out as well as hunting down and linking to other websites I find with similar content. Furthermore, I am collecting a bibliography of online and print resources for the study of historical markers, cemeteries, memorials and similar sites.

All Saints Day is an appropriate time, I guess, to give this project a facelift. But that should not in any way lend support to any impression that this project is about practicing remembrance. It is about observing, recording, studying and understanding remembrance within human communities.

My trip to a local cemetery this afternoon can serve as an illustration. I took my three-year-old son along for a walk, but had my camera at the ready. We were not there to visit any graves or to pay our respects to anyone. Niklas was there to kick leaves and walk; I was there to be with him and hunt for historical markers in the landscape. We both got what we came for.

I found a military cemetery with over 300 graves, including a seperate section for civilian victims of a January, 1945 air raid on our town of Tuebingen, Germany. At least that is what I think happened. I'll need to look into it a bit before I post the photos. At the adjacent memorial ensemble (three crosses, as on Golgotha, and a low platform), there were a few dozen people assembled for an All Saints Day service. Candles had been lit and wreaths had been laid. This was memorial culture in action. We got there as the ceremony was ending, so I took a few photos from a discreet distance, then asked an old woman if she had been here in Tuebingen in 1945. She had, but couldn't tell me what had happened on January 15th, 1945, because, "worked in a bank and had a sick sister". That would speak against my air raid thesis, I suppose - even someone in a bank would remember that. A priest was kind enough to answer a few of my questions. I'll put everything I know about the memorials at the Bergfriedhof in Tuebingen at the Sites of Memory on its own special page soon.

Right now, you'll already find a few dozen other sites of memory there, primarily from Tuebingen, Germany and Riga, Latvia, photographed and described in various degrees of thoroughness. The lists of links and other resources is extremely modest at present, but will grow quickly. I hope the website proves useful and popular as it continues to expand.

Mark R. Hatlie

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Sites of Memory

Welcome

This blog grew out of the sites-of-memory.de project. It features impressions and analysis of past and present memorial culture.

If you would like to be an author for this blog, see our call for contributors.

The blog logo is a photo of a statue at the soldiers' "Brethren Cemetery" in Riga, Latvia.

Aministrator Contact

M. Hatlie
Im Feuerhägle 1
72072 Tübingen
Germany
Cell: +49-163-1341718
e-mail

Disclaimer

The authors are solely responsible for what they write in this blog. We do not accept responsibility for the content behind any of the links posted here. We make every effort to check them, but their content can change. The owners of the webpages linked to are solely responsible for the content of those webpages.

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Last update: Tue Nov 18, 22:11

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