REFRAME books is delighted to present the new open access, edited collection The Memorial Museum in the Digital Age. Edited by Victoria Grace Walden, The Memorial Museum in the Digital Age is the first comprehensive review of thinking and practice related to the effects and affects of the digital for memorial museums. These commemorative and educational spaces have traditionally contained object-heavy displays to stand-in for people, cultures and things that have been destroyed. What then happens when collected material evidence is presented to visitors/ users in digitalised forms – distanced from the material proximity offered at so-called ‘authentic sites’? Whilst memorial museums have often been celebrated for their commemorative and educative agendas, they are also political and tend to reiterate museological logics deeply embedded in problematic histories of arranging cultural objects and identities. Can digital technologies offer the potential to rearrange or resituate the memorial museum into activist spaces? Can going online disrupt the national memory politics that commonly characterise memorial museums, or does it enable more of the same? These are some of the questions that interest the contributors of this collection.
Whilst there is a growing number of publications interested in museums and the digital, the specificity of the memorial museum is understudied. Yet, it raises particular concerns relating to preservation, materiality, ethics, and absence that require careful consideration in relation to the digital. After a theoretical consideration of what the memorial museum is and could be in this ‘digital age’, this book offers a series of case studies written by curators, artists, and academics covering memorial museum examples in North America, South America, Africa, Europe, Asia, and Australia.
Download the book here for free from the 12th December 2022, and you can follow REFRAME site Digital Holocaust Memory for related research and updates on the project.
About the editor:
Victoria Grace Walden is a Senior Lecturer in Media Studies at the University of Sussex. She is the author of Cinematic Intermedialities and Contemporary Holocaust Memory, and a number of articles about mediated Holocaust memory published in Memory Studies, Holocaust Studies: A Journal of Culture and History, Frames Cinema Journal, Animation Studies, and Short Film Studies. She is editor of Digital Holocaust Memory, Education and Research (2021), a complementary special issue of Holocaust Studies, and Editor-in-Chief of the Digital Holocaust Memory project. She has worked as digital coordinator for the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (the IHRA) and freelance educator for the Holocaust Educational Trust, and has been an academic advisor for projects run by the Imperial War Museums, the Claims Conference, and a joint initiative of the UN and UNESCO. She is Principal Investigator on the British Academy/ Leverhulme Trust funded project Digital Holocaust Memory: Hyperconnective Museums and Archives of the Future