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Journal Article

Citation

Zavar EM, Schumann RL. Geogr. Rev. 2019; 109(2): 157-179.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, American Geographical Society)

DOI

10.1111/gere.12316

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The postdisaster landscape is replete with memorials that help communities collectively remember destructive events and recover psychologically. Although commemoration is intrinsic to all stages of recovery, little research from the disaster-science field engages memorial texts across disasters. Meanwhile, a rich body of work on memorials and their functions exists in the cultural geographic tradition. Drawing from this literature, the current study examines a sample of U.S.-based memorials to discern patterns within the postdisaster commemorative landscape. This research leverages discourse analysis to interrogate the meanings and mechanics of postdisaster memory work.

FINDINGS revealing that disasters catalyze remembrances that remake places, postdisaster memorial texts construct wide-ranging degrees of intimacy, and memorials distilling survivor memories impel community recovery differently than memorials that reconstruct imagined pasts. These identified patterns in postdisaster commemoration enable further systematic exploration of memory work in the long-term recovery process.


Language: en

Keywords

disaster recovery; sense of place; social memory

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