
Networked Remembrance
Excavating Buried Memories in the Railways beneath London and Berlin
Samuel Merrill(Author)
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 18. October 2017
Book
Paperback/Softback
410 pages
978-3-0343-1919-5 (ISBN)
Description
Networked Remembrance is the first book to explore questions of urban memory within what are some of the most commonly experienced subterranean margins of the contemporary city: underground railways. Using London's and Berlin's underground railways as comparative case studies, this book reveals how social memories are spatially produced - through practices of cartography and toponymy, memory work and memorialization, exploration and artistic appropriation - within the everyday and concealed places associated with these transport networks.
Through numerous empirical excavations, this book highlights an array of different mnemonic actors, processes, structures and discourses that have determined the forms of «networked remembrance» associated with the subterranean stations and sections of the London Underground and Berlin U- and S-Bahn. In turn, it invites readers to descend into the «buried memories» that are often imperceptible to those travelling by rail beneath the British and German capitals and encourages them to ask what other memories might lie latent in the infrastructural landscapes beneath their feet.
This book was the winner of the 2014 Peter Lang Young Scholars Competition in Memory Studies.
Reviews / Votes
<<In Networked Remembrance, Sam Merrill explores in detail the production of social memory in what has so far been an underexplored terrain in memory studies, the underground transport networks. In a densely written, engaging and cleverly structured book, Merrill descends into the London Underground and Berlin Untergrundbahn (U-Bahn) and Stadtschnellbahn (S-Bahn) to offer an empirically rich take on the ways in which these two undergrounds become part of urban remembering (and forgetting).>>(Petr Gibas, The London Journal 43/2018)
<<[...] the book makes an important contribution to the study of London and Berlin, the history of underground infrastructure, and understandings of cultural and social memory.>>
(Rebecca Clare Dolgoy, German Studies Review, 41/3 2018)
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Peter Lang Group AG, International Academic Publishers
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
30 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 225 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 24 mm
Weight
600 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-0343-1919-5 (9783034319195)
DOI
10.3726/b10882
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Samuel Merrill
Networked Remembrance
Excavating Buried Memories in the Railways beneath London and Berlin
E-Book
01/2018
1st Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€79.99
Available for download

Samuel Merrill
Networked Remembrance
Excavating Buried Memories in the Railways beneath London and Berlin
E-Book
01/2018
1st Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€79.99
Available for download
Person
Samuel Merrill is an interdisciplinary researcher based at the Department of Sociology's Digital Social Research Unit at Umeå University. He completed his doctorate in Cultural Geography at University College London in 2014.
Content
CONTENTS: Departure Points - Social Memory in and under the City - Working across and beneath London and Berlin - Mapping an Icon: The Underground's Mnemonic Cartographies - Reflection: The Changing Symbolism of Berlin's Network Map - Naming the Network: The U- and S-Bahn's Commemorative Toponyms - Reflection: The Underground's Toponymic Heritage - The Roots of Resistance: Memory Work at Samariterstrasse Station - Reflection: The Compensatory Memorialization of De Menezes - Accounting for Trauma: Memorializing Accidents under London - Reflection: Memorial Absence in the U- and S-Bahn - Networked Ruins: Re-encountering London's Disused Stations - Reflection: (Re)membering Berlin's Buried Ghost-Stations - Art from Below: Creating Mnemonic Imaginaries in the Vestiges of the U10 - Reflection: Mixing Memory at Aldwych - Infrastructures of Memory beneath and beyond London and Berlin.