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Memories of Violence: Artists and the Curation of Mnemonic Peace
Memories of Violence: Artists and the Curation of Mnemonic Peace

by Stefanie Kappler

University of Michigan Press, 2027

ISBNs

Cloth: 978-0-472-07857-8

Paper: 978-0-472-05857-0

eISBN: 978-0-472-90711-3 (OA)

About the Book

In wartime, artists often play an important role in keeping social structures alive and mitigating suffering. Yet art can also be used as a tool for the propagation of violence or the consolidation of an unjust status quo; the brutal iconography used on the murals in Belfast during the Troubles being a prominent example. Memories of Violence investigates the potential of artwork to bring to the fore often-invisible configurations of violence that span across the globe.

Many peace processes fail to address the legacies of violence and to offer meaningful avenues of repair on the part of perpetrators, some of whom are outside the physical space in which violence was, or continues to be, experienced. Stefanie Kappler looks at situations of violence where societies are implicated in and continue to benefit from the legacies of violence, particularly the peace processes of South Africa, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Northern Ireland. Bringing together Peace and Conflict Studies with Memory Studies, Kappler examines how art offers an opportunity to achieve a mnemonic peace—a memory-oriented peace that acknowledges the complex ways in which historical violence and its legacies are constituted. While recognizing the power structures that limit artists and curators, Memories of Violence reveals how they can play a role in addressing situations of complex implication; amplify the voices that call for acknowledgment, reparations, and solidarity; and suggest avenues for facilitating this process.

About the Author

Stefanie Kappler is Professor in Conflict Resolution and Peacebuilding at Durham University.

Reviews

Memories of Violence makes an important contribution to peacebuilding studies by arguing that memory matters, and that memory should be included in discussions of peace efforts in societies that have experienced conflict. This book is also important for memory studies as well because it describes the actions of artists who work in the field of memory.”

— Dovile Budryte, Vytautas Magnus University

Memories of Violence is an excellent book ripe for the moment we are living in. It is a very well-written and engaging book that tells a story we need to hear.”

— Mneesha Gellman, Emerson College

Tags
Configurations: Critical Studies Of World Politics, Memories, Violence, Art, Political Science
Open Access Information

License: CC BY-NC