Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Visitor Experience at Holocaust Memorials and Museums [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 1120 g, 2 Tables, black and white; 12 Halftones, black and white; 12 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032115874
  • ISBN-13: 9781032115870
  • Formaat: Hardback, 286 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 1120 g, 2 Tables, black and white; 12 Halftones, black and white; 12 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032115874
  • ISBN-13: 9781032115870
Visitor Experience at Holocaust Memorials and Museums is the first volume to offer comprehensive insights into visitor reactions to a wide range of museum exhibitions, memorials, and memory sites.

Drawing exclusively upon empirical research, chapters within the book offer critical insights about visitor experience at museums and memory sites in the United States, Poland, Austria, Germany, France, the UK, Norway, Hungary, Australia, and Israel. The contributions to the volume explore visitor experience in all its complexity and argue that visitors are more than just "learners". Approaching visitor experience as a multidimensional phenomenon, the book positions visitor experience within a diverse national, ethnic, cultural, social, and generational context. It also considers the impact of museums curatorial and design choices, visitor motivations and expectations, and the crucial role emotions play in shaping understanding of historical events and subjects. By approaching visitors as active interpreters of memory spaces and museum exhibitions, Popescu and the contributing authors provide a much-needed insight into the different ways in which members of the public act as "agents of memory", endowing this history with personal and collective meaning and relevance.

Visitor Experience at Holocaust Memorials and Museums offers significant insights into audience motivation, expectation, and behaviour. It is essential reading for academics, postgraduate students and practitioners with an interest in museums and heritage, visitor studies, Holocaust and genocide studies, and tourism.
List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
x
Preface xii
Introduction: Visitors at Holocaust Museums and Memory Sites 1(16)
Diana I. Popescu
PART I Visitor Experience in Museum Spaces
17(100)
1 Mobile Memory; Or What Visitors Saw at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
19(12)
Michael Bernard-Donals
2 Visitor Emotions, Experientiality, Holocaust, and Human Rights: Trip Advisor Responses to the Topography of Terror (Berlin) and the Kazerne Dossin (Mechelen)
31(15)
Stephan Jaeger
3 "Really Made You Feel for the Jews Who Went Through This Terrible Time in History": Holocaust Audience Re-Mediation and Re-Narrativization at the Florida Holocaust Museum
46(15)
Chaim Noy
4 Understanding Visitors' Bodily Engagement with Holocaust Museum Architecture: A Comparative Empirical Research at Three European Museums
61(15)
Xenia Tsiftsi
5 Attention Please: The Tour Guide Is Here to Speak Out: The Role of the Israeli Tour Guide at Holocaust Sites in Israel
76(12)
Yael Shtauber
Yaniv Poria
Zehavit Gross
6 The Impact of Emotions, Empathy, and Memory in Holocaust Exhibitions: A Study of the National Holocaust Centre & Museum in Nottinghamshire, and the Jewish Museum in London
88(15)
Sofia Katharaki
7 The Affective Entanglements of the Visitor Experience at Holocaust Sites and Museums
103(14)
Adele Nye
Jennifer Clark
PART II Digital Engagement Inside and Outside the Museum and Memory Site
117(74)
8 "...It No Longer Is the Same Place": Exploring Realities in the Memorial Falstad Centre with the "Falstad Digital Reconstruction and V/AR Guide"
119(14)
Anette Homlong Storeide
9 "Ways of Seeing". Visitor Response to Holocaust Photographs: At `The Eye as Witness. Recording the Holocaust' Exhibition
133(12)
Diana I. Popescu
Mai Ken Umbach
10 Dachau from a Distance: The Liberation during the COVID-19 Pandemic
145(15)
Kate Marrison
11 Curating the Past: Digital Media and Visitor Experiences at the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe
160(15)
Christoph Bareither
12 Diversity, Digital Programming, and the Small Holocaust Education Centre: Examining Paths and Obstacles to Visitor Experience
175(16)
Laura B. Cohen
Cary Lane
PART III Visitors at Former Camp Sites
191(91)
13 The Unanticipated Visitor: A Case Study of Response and Poetry at Sites of Holocaust Memory
193(17)
Anna Veprinska
14 "Did You Have a Good Trip?": Young People's Reflections on Visiting the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum and the Town of Oswiecim
210(14)
Alasdair Richardson
15 Rewind, Relisten, Rethink: The Value of Audience Reception for Grasping Art's Efficacy
224(13)
Tanja Schult
16 "The Value of Being There": Visitor Experiences at German Holocaust Memorial Sites
237(14)
Doreen Pastor
17 "Everyone Talks about the Wind": Temporality, Climate, and the More-Than-Representational Landscapes of the Memorial Du Camp De Rivesaltes
251(15)
Ian Cantoni
18 Guiding or Obscuring? Visitor Engagement with Treblinka's Audio Guide and its Sonic Infrastructure
266(16)
Kathryn Agnes Huether
Index 282
Diana I. Popescu is Honorary Research Fellow at Birkbeck Institute for the study of Antisemitism, Birkbeck, University of London. Popescus research focuses on public history and public reception of violent histories, particularly of the Holocaust. Her work looks at the ethics and the aesthetics of representing racial violence in public art, museum exhibitions and memorial projects and at how members of the public engage with and respond to such representations.