<p><em>Terrain of Memory</em> is a powerful contribution to cultural studies and memory work...employing an approach that scrutinizes with exacting honesty her moments of crisis, blockages, and breakthroughs, McAllister unfolds a scholarly activist praxis that is ethical, inventive, inimitable, and suffused with dramatic emotional struggle.</p> - Glenn Deer (University of Toronto Quarterly, Vol 81, No 3) <p>The novelty of the subject, distinctive methodological approach, engaging voice, and sophisticated analysis makes Terrain of Memory a worthwhile selection for public history classes seeking to model how to understand both past and present meanings of monuments and memorials, though the more analyti-cal sections may be more appropriate for advanced rather than introductory. </p> - Gail Dubrow (The Public Historian, Vol 34, No 4)
Introduction: The Drive to Do Research
1 A Necessary Crisis
2 Mapping the Spaces of Internment
3 The Chronotope of the (Im)memorial
4 Continuity and Change between Generations
5 Making Space for Other Memories in the Historical Landscape
6 In Memory of Others
Conclusion: Points of Departure
Notes
References
Index