The place of trauma: Memory, hauntings, and the temporality of ruins

TitleThe place of trauma: Memory, hauntings, and the temporality of ruins
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsDylan Trigg
JournalMemory Studies
Volume2
Issue1
Pagination87-101
ISSN1750-6980, 1750-6999
Abstract

Implicit in theoretical treatments of the memory of trauma is the fragmented reception of the past. While a great deal of research has approached this issue from the perspective of oral testimony, what has remained underdeveloped is the role sites of memory play in contributing to our understanding of trauma. Accordingly, in this article, I intend make a foray into this convergence between place and trauma through undertaking a phenomenological investigation of the testimonial attributes of ruins. In doing so, I will pursue two central questions. First, insofar as the built environment is able to contain memory, how does the place of trauma testify to history? Second, if ruins are by their nature contingent and dynamic, how can the past be spatially preserved without creating a false unity between time and the event? In response to these questions, I will put forward the notion that sites of trauma articulate memory precisely through refusing a continuous temporal narrative. My conclusion is that the appearance of the ruin, understood phenomenologically, allows us to approach the spatio-temporality of trauma in terms of a logic of hauntings and voids.

URLhttp://mss.sagepub.com/content/2/1/87
DOI10.1177/1750698008097397
Short TitleThe place of trauma