Introduction: Why collect and preserve protest memories?.- Chapter 1 A memory studies approach to protest.- Chapter 2 Rapid response collecting in the Womens' March: from the streets to the museum.- Chapter 3 Archives of protest and protesting archives.- Chapter 4 Protesting monuments and creating new urban spaces.- Conclusion: Toward a critical understanding of protest memory work.
Red Chidgey is Lecturer in Gender and Media at the Department of Culture, Media & Creative Industries, King’s College London. She is co-investigator of the Afterlives of Protest Research Network (AHRC) and co-chair of the Memory & Activism working group of the Memory Studies Association.
Joanne Garde-Hansen is Professor in Culture, Media and Communication, in the Centre for Cultural & Media Policy Studies at the University of Warwick
This is a fascinating study of the challenges faced by cultural institutions in collecting and curating the memory of protest. Written in a clear and accessible manner which will appeal to a wide readership, it offers a compelling argument about the civic value of giving protest an afterlife. Highly recommended.
- Ann Rigney, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
This short book enlivens memory as something that can spark protest and propel the commemoration, re-use and attempted management of its ‘afterlives’ by various players. Case studies of the Women’s March and London’s environmental river activisms offer rich models for readers seeking to understand the prefigurative political possibilities of activist collaborations with cultural institutions and for cultural workers alike. A terrific read.
- Kylie Message, Australian National University, Australia
This book addresses the emergence of ‘protest memory’ as a powerful contemporary shaper of ideas and practices in culture, media and heritage domains. Directly focused on the role of museum and archive practitioners in protest memory curation, it makes a compelling contribution to our understanding of how social movements and activist experiences are publicly remembered and activated for social and environmental justice.
Red Chidgey is Senior Lecturer in Gender and Media at the Department of Culture, Media & Creative Industries, King’s College London. They are co-investigator of the Afterlives of Protest Research Network (AHRC) and former co-chair of the Memory & Activism working group of the Memory Studies Association.
Joanne Garde-Hansen is Professor of Culture, Media and Communication in the School of Media and Communication at the University of Leeds, and has published widely on media and memory, media and water, and media histories. She led the Afterlives of Protest Research Network (AHRC) while at the University of Warwick.