Chapter
Open Access
Rendering forgotten places of NS terror visible
Art, research, participation and digital technologies as an assemblage in the project “Making Traces Readable in the NS Forced Labour Camp Roggendorf/Pulkau”
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Edith Blaschitz
, Heidemarie Uhl , Georg Vogt , Rosa Andraschek , Martin Krenn and Wolfgang Gasser
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Introduction 1
- Does it get better with time? Web search consistency and relevance in the visual representation of the Holocaust 13
- Participatory memory – historiography – research? Exploring representations of the Holocaust on social media 33
- Digital Holocaust memory: A study of Italian Holocaust museums and their social media users 61
- The historian influencer: Mediating and transmitting Holocaust memory on social media in Brazil 83
- The media network of memory: Sharing Holocaust stories on TikTok and collaborative writing of “memory books” 101
- #Connectedmemories: Non-persecuted German witnesses of National Socialism on YouTube 121
- Rendering forgotten places of NS terror visible 141
- Social media at memorial sites: Are we sure this is a good idea? 167
- The impact of Nebraska’s collective memory of the Holocaust via digital exploration 191
- “Follow for more spookiness”: The dybbuk box, networked digital Holocaust memory and interactive narrative on social media 209
- Digital trauma processing in social media groups: Transgenerational Holocaust trauma on Facebook 235
- List of contributors 261
- Index 267
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Contents V
- Introduction 1
- Does it get better with time? Web search consistency and relevance in the visual representation of the Holocaust 13
- Participatory memory – historiography – research? Exploring representations of the Holocaust on social media 33
- Digital Holocaust memory: A study of Italian Holocaust museums and their social media users 61
- The historian influencer: Mediating and transmitting Holocaust memory on social media in Brazil 83
- The media network of memory: Sharing Holocaust stories on TikTok and collaborative writing of “memory books” 101
- #Connectedmemories: Non-persecuted German witnesses of National Socialism on YouTube 121
- Rendering forgotten places of NS terror visible 141
- Social media at memorial sites: Are we sure this is a good idea? 167
- The impact of Nebraska’s collective memory of the Holocaust via digital exploration 191
- “Follow for more spookiness”: The dybbuk box, networked digital Holocaust memory and interactive narrative on social media 209
- Digital trauma processing in social media groups: Transgenerational Holocaust trauma on Facebook 235
- List of contributors 261
- Index 267