Archaeologies of Totalitarianism, Authoritarianism, and Repression

"This volume offers detailed case studies that apply the approach of contemporary archaeology to investigate and expose ways in which the repressive actions and policies of authoritarian and totalitarian regimes affect peoples’ everyday lives, bodies, mob

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Archaeologies of Totalitarianism, Authoritarianism, and Repression Dark Modernities Edited by James Symonds · Pavel Vařeka

Palgrave Studies in Cultural Heritage and Conflict

Series Editors Ihab Saloul University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, The Netherlands Rob van der Laarse University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, The Netherlands Britt Baillie Wits City Institute University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg, South Africa

This book series explores the relationship between cultural heritage and conflict. The key themes of the series are the heritage and memory of war and conflict, contested heritage, and competing memories. The series editors seek books that analyze the dynamics of the past from the perspective of tangible and intangible remnants, spaces, and traces as well as heritage appropriations and restitutions, significations, musealizations, and mediatizations in the present. Books in the series should address topics such as the politics of heritage and conflict, identity and trauma, mourning and reconciliation, nationalism and ethnicity, diaspora and intergenerational memories, painful heritage and terrorscapes, as well as the mediated reenactments of conflicted pasts. Professor Ihab Saloul is founder and research co-director of the Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM) at University of Amsterdam and Professor of Memory Studies and Narrative at the Umberto Eco Centre at Bologna University. Saloul’s interests include cultural memory and identity politics, narrative theory and visual analysis, conflict and trauma, Diaspora and migration as well as contemporary cultural thought in the Middle East. Professor Rob van der Laarse is professor of Conflict and War Heritage at and the University of Amsterdam and VU University Amsterdam, and he was the founding director of the Amsterdam School of Heritage, Memory and Material Culture. Van der Laarse’s research focuses on (early) modern European elite and intellectual cultures, cultural landscape, heritage and identity politics, and the cultural roots and postwar memory of the Holocaust and other forms of mass violence. Dr. Britt Baillie is an Honorary Research Fellow at the Wits City Institute, University of the Witwatersrand and a founding member of the Centre for Urban Conflict Studies at the University of Cambridge. Baillie’s interests include the politics of cultural heritage, urban heritage, religious heritage, living heritage, heritage as commons, and contested heritage.

More information about this series at http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14638

James Symonds · Pavel Vaˇreka Editors

Archaeologies of Totalitarianism, Authoritarianism, and Repression Dark Modernities

Editors James Symonds ACASA, Archaeology University of Amsterdam Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Pavel Vaˇreka Department of Archaeology University of West Bohemia Pilsen, Czech Republic

Palgrave Studies in Cultural Heritage and Conflict ISBN 978-3-030-46682-4 ISBN 978-3-030-46683-1 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-46683-1 © The Editor(s