Freya Powell's piece "Only Remains Remain", an elegy for the hundreds of unidentified migrants buried in mass graves in Sacred Heart Cemetery in Brooks County, Texas, will be performed at MoMA PS1 on October 23, 2021. After the first performance, Alexandra Delano and I will be part of a panel discussion on border deaths and the politics of grief.
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Special Issue in German Politics and Society on Myths of Innocence in German Public Memory5/15/2021 Our special issue (co-edited with Jonathan Bach) "Myths of Innocence in German Public Memory" was just published in German Politics and Society.
You can also find an interview with Alexandra Delano about this work here.
Article on Public Apology for School Segregation published in Journal of Educational Controversy1/31/2021 Our article "Making Sense of and with 'Profound Regret': Howard County Board of Education’s Apology for a Racially Segregated Public School System" (co-authored with Rachel Garver) was published in issue 14 of the Journal of Educational Controversy.
Wednesday, March 4th, 2020. More information and RSVP here.
Article on Commemoration of Armenian Genocide in Germany published in German Studies Review2/28/2020 My article "Transnational Memories, National Memory Regimes: Recognizing the Armenian Genocide in Germany" was published in Volume 43, Number 1 of the German Studies Review. As part of the VW Sunday Sessions, Freya Powell's Only Remains Remain at MoMa PS1 on March 21, 2020, creates an elegy for the hundreds of unidentified migrants buried in mass graves in Sacred Heart Cemetery in Brooks County, Texas. The performance features a tabloid-sized "take-a-way" that excerpts our Social Research piece on the politics of mourning at the border. See also the MoMa magazine for more information.
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AuthorBenjamin Nienass Archives
March 2024
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