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        <title>Latest Articles from Heritage, Memory and Conflict</title>
        <description>Latest 10 Articles from Heritage, Memory and Conflict</description>
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            <title>Latest Articles from Heritage, Memory and Conflict</title>
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		    <title>﻿A virtual place of memory: Virtual reality as a method for communicating conflicted heritage at Camp Westerbork</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/71198/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 3: 87-93</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/ijhmc.3.71198</p>
					<p>Authors: Jitte Waagen, Tijm Lanjouw, Maurice de Kleijn</p>
					<p>Abstract: An important goal of the project Accessing Campscapes: inclusive strategies for using European Conflicted Heritage (iC-ACCESS), has been to develop inclusive approaches for the presentation and communication of contending perspectives on Nazi and Stalinist sites (Dolghin et al. 2017). A key objective for treating these ‘heritagescapes’ has been to ‘develop state-of-the-art strategies and implement innovative tools which provide sustainable in-situ and virtual forms of investigation, presentation and representation’ (Van der Laarse 2020). A central issue which is gaining increasing attention in heritage studies and management is the dilemma of preserving and exhibiting material remnants of Wehrmacht and SS-barracks or residencies at Holocaust memorial camps which are generally framed as victimhood sites. The Commander’s house at Herinneringscentrum Westerbork is a case in point and can be placed in different perspectives on the history of the camp terrain and all related sensibilities on its meaning as an object of heritage. In order to realise an application that can accommodate these perspectives, iC-ACCESS project leader Prof. dr. R. van der Laarse contracted two laboratories specialised consecutively in 3D visualisation technologies and spatial information to cooperate on its development, the 4D Research Lab (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands) and the SPINlab (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam). This paper illustrates the ideas, discussions and choices related to the production of the ‘Campscapes – Westerbork Commander’s House App’, provides a concise technical description of the actual application and presents a short prospection on potential future developments.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2023 18:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Campscapes in and through testimonies: New approaches to researching and representing oral history interviews in memorial museums</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/82514/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 3: 75-86</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.3.82514</p>
					<p>Authors: Zuzanna Dziuban, Cord Pagenstecher</p>
					<p>Abstract: This paper discusses the role of audio and visual testimonies in safeguarding, understanding, presenting, validating and decentering the history and memory campscapes, be it, for researchers, practitioners, memory activists, or museum visitors. Its primary objective is to present and contextualize two research tools developed within the framework of the project Accessing Campscapes: Strategies for Using European Conflicted Heritage: the Campscapes Testimony Catalogue, a new directory of oral history interviews devoted to selected camps covered within the scope of the project; and the online environment Remembering Westerbork: Learning with Interviews – a prototype of an online display environment presenting survivors’ experiences to today’s visitors in an exemplary memorial that opens up, expands and complexifies the paradigmatic narrative offered by the campscape at the on-site exhibition.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2023 18:00:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Exhibiting Jasenovac: Controversies, manipulations and politics of memory</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/71583/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 3: 65-69</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/ijhmc.3.71583</p>
					<p>Authors: Andriana Bencic Kuznar, Vjeran Pavlakovic</p>
					<p>Abstract: The Jasenovac Concentration Camp prevails as one of the most potent symbols that continues to fuel ideological and ethno-national divisions in Croatia and neighboring Yugoslav successor states. We argue that mnemonic actors who distort the history, memory, and representations of Jasenovac through commemorative speeches, exhibitions, and political discourse are by no means new. The misuses of the Jasenovac tragedy, vividly present during socialist Yugoslavia, continue to the present day. Drawing upon the history of mediating Jasenovac as well as recent examples of commemorative speeches and problematic exhibitions, this article highlights some of the present-day struggles surrounding this former campscape.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2023 18:00:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>Beyond mass graves: exhuming Francoist concentration camps</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/71312/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 3: 39-45</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.3.71312</p>
					<p>Authors: Laura Muñoz-Encinar</p>
					<p>Abstract: As several historical investigations have revealed, between 130,000 and 150,000 Republicans were executed during the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) and Franco’s dictatorship (1939–1977). The Francoist repressive strategy – unleashed after the coup d’état of 17 July 1936 – developed complex mechanisms of physical and psychological punishment. The continuing subjugation of those still living was enacted through concentration camps, prisons and forced labour. During the War and Franco’s dictatorship, there were nearly three hundred concentration camps, and between 367,000 and 500,000 prisoners went through those camps. During the transition to democracy, neither the State nor the judiciary investigated mass crimes connected to the repression and execution of left-wing Republicans. After Franco’s death, some family groups recovered some of these bodies buried in unmarked mass graves without scientific involvement. In the year 2000, the first scientific exhumations took place, and since then, more than 400 mass graves have been opened, and up to 9.000 bodies have been recovered.        The memory of the victims of Franco’s violence has been mainly centralised on mass graves. The opening of mass graves has positioned the Spanish Civil War case within the international sphere of human rights violations and has also opened a new window of opportunity for the analysis of Francoist concentration camps. In this article, I provide a holistic study of mass graves that combines archaeology and forensic anthropology with historical and ethnographic research in order to examine, in detail, both the burials and the broader landscape of the repression. In this contribution, I focus on the Concentration Camp of Castuera, in southwestern Spain, a forgotten campscape, and show how mass graves, which have become widely known as sites of research and commemoration in Spain, were closely related to the camps’ complex repressive system. My results have allowed me to conduct an integrated analysis of this context of political violence. I conclude that archaeology and forensic anthropology have played a crucial role in elucidating the functioning and social reality of Spanish camps, whilst enabling new narratives about past Francoist repression.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2023 18:00:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>Uncovering war crimes: Hidden graves of the Falstad forest</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/94923/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 3: 19-24</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.3.94923</p>
					<p>Authors: Marek E. Jasinski, Andrzej Ossowski, Kate Spradley</p>
					<p>Abstract: This paper presents and discusses historical and archaeological data regarding war crimes committed by Nazi occupants during Second World War in the vicinity of the SS Prison Camp Falstad in Central Norway, and the issue of still unknown graves of executed prisoners in the Falstad Forest. Specialists from several Norwegian and foreign institutions are at present developing a set of advanced methods to be deployed during surveys of the Forest in search of hidden graves.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2023 18:00:05 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿From the last hut of Monowitz to the last hut of Belsen</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/97869/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 3: 1-4</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.3.97869</p>
					<p>Authors: Robert Jan van Pelt</p>
					<p>Abstract: The article offers an in-depth investigation into the history of, and post-war practices around, the most fundamental and indispensable architectural structure of the Nazi camps: the wooden prefabricated barrack hut.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 10 May 2023 18:00:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>Memory, art and intergenerational transmission. Artistic practices with young people in memory sites in Argentina</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/71191/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 2: 51-60</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.2.71191</p>
					<p>Authors: Lizel Tornay, Victoria Alvarez, Fabricio Laino Sanchis, Mariana Paganini</p>
					<p>Abstract: This text analyzes recent experiences with young people from Middle Schools of the city of Buenos Aires (Argentina) in Memory Sites of this city. Our inquiry is interested in the intergenerational transmission referring to the traumatic past around the last military dictatorship established in Argentina between 1976 and 1983. With this interest, two experiences designed through artistic languages are analyzed: the Posters Project from the Memory Park and the use of poetry in the guided visits to the Memory Site at "El Olimpo", former Clandestine Detention Center for Torture and Extermination, both spaces of the city of Buenos Aires.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 12 Jan 2022 18:00:06 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>Hypermnesia and Amnesia: Remembering (with) the Body and Post-Conflict Memorials and Architectures</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/70827/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 2: 29-38</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.2.70827</p>
					<p>Authors: Andrea Borsari, Giovanni Leoni</p>
					<p>Abstract: The article consists of two parts. The first part (§§ 1–2) investigates the indiscriminate and absolute remembering and forgetting of everything, hypermnesia and amnesia as the extreme terms that research has used and uses for the different phenomena of memory, both in individuals and in social and political forms. In the face of these shifts it is thus indispensable to re-establish a critique of the paradoxical effects of memory aids and, at the same time, to seek new forms of remembrance that by mixing an experiential dimension and public sphere refocus the attention on the connection between latency, tension and experiential triggers of involuntary memory and on the ability to break through the fictions of collective memory. On this basis, the second part of the article (§§ 3–4) analyses how the experience of political and racial deportation during World War II drastically changed the idea of memorial architecture. More specifically, the analysis deals with a kind of memorial device that must represent and memorialise persons whose bodies have been deliberately cancelled. The aim is to present and analyse the artistic and architectonic efforts to refer to those forgotten bodies, on the one hand, and on the other hand to point out how for these new kind of memorials the body of the visitor is asked to participate, both physically and emotionally, in this somehow paradoxical search for lost bodies, offering oneself as a substitute.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 12 Jan 2022 18:00:04 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Trauma and allegory: truthfulness in fact and fiction. Making a private archive productive</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/70631/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 2: 19-27</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/hmc.2.70631</p>
					<p>Authors: Lars Ebert</p>
					<p>Abstract: Herengracht 401 (H401), until 2019 known as Castrum Peregrini, represents the complex and intriguing history of a hermetic community of artists and scholars in Amsterdam which was formed in the years of the Nazi occupation of The Netherlands, 1940–1945.This article attempts to take stock on what we have learned in these ten years about the history of the place, as an indicator of memory politics. It also reflects on the hermeneutic gap of what we cannot know of H401’s history as we lack experiential knowledge of eyewitnesses. As the author argues below, the site of H401 shows how the ‘hermeneutic gap’ can offer a chance to make an archive, such as in the case of ‘the house on Herengracht 401’, productive and meaningful through the artistic practice of research.</p>
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		    <category>Research Article</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 12 Jan 2022 18:00:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		    <title>﻿Spaces of memory</title>
		    <link>https://ijhmc.arphahub.com/article/78980/</link>
		    <description><![CDATA[
					<p>Heritage, Memory and Conflict 2: 1-5</p>
					<p>DOI: 10.3897/ijhmc.2.e78980</p>
					<p>Authors: Cristina Demaria, Anna Maria Lorusso, Patrizia Violi, Ihab Saloul</p>
					<p>Abstract: </p>
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		    <category>Editorial</category>
		    <pubDate>Wed, 12 Jan 2022 18:00:01 +0000</pubDate>
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