
Tourists of History
Memory, Kitsch, and Consumerism from Oklahoma City to Ground Zero
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Sturken contends that a consumer culture of comfort objects such as World Trade Center snow globes, FDNY teddy bears, and Oklahoma City Memorial t-shirts and branded water, as well as reenactments of traumatic events in memorial and architectural designs, enables a national tendency to see U.S. culture as distant from both history and world politics. A kitsch comfort culture contributes to a "tourist" relationship to history: Americans can feel good about visiting and buying souvenirs at sites of national mourning without having to engage with the economic, social, and political causes of the violent events. While arguing for the importance of remembering tragic losses of life, Sturken is urging attention to a dangerous confluenceâof memory, tourism, consumerism, paranoia, security, and kitschâthat promulgates fear to sell safety, offers prepackaged emotion at the expense of critical thought, contains alternative politics, and facilitates public acquiescence in the federal government's repressive measures at home and its aggressive political and military policies abroad.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Consuming Fear and Selling Comfort
- 2. Citizens and Survivors:Cultural Memory and Oklahoma City
- 3. The Spectacle of Death and the Spectacle of Grief: The Execution of Timothy McVeigh
- 4. Tourism and âSacred Groundâ:The Space of Ground Zero
- 5. Architectures of Grief and the Aesthetics of Absence
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index