William Logan is UNESCO Professor of Heritage and Urbanism and Director, Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific, Deakin University, Melbourne. His research interests include world heritage, Asian heritage, and heritage and human rights. His recent publications include: Hanoi: Biography of a City (2000), The Disappearing Asian City (2003) and Vientiane: Transformation of a Lao Landscape (2007, co-author). Keir Reeves is a Monash Research Fellow at Monash University. His research interests include: Chinese-Australian history, Asian history and heritage, heritage studies, mining history and cultural landscape analysis. He is contributing co-editor of the recent publication Deeper Leads: New Approached to Victorian Goldfields History (2007).
List of illustrations
p. viii
List of contributors
p. xi
Ackowledgements
p. xiii
Introduction: Remembering places of pain and shame
p. 1
Massacre and genocide sites
p. 15
Let the dead be remembered: interpretation of the Nanjing Massacre Memorial
p. 17
The Hiroshima ‘Peace Memorial’: transforming legacy, memories and landscapes
p. 34
Auschwitz-Birkenau: the challenges of heritage management following the Cold War
p. 50
‘Dig a hole and bury the past in it’: reconciliation and the heritage of genocide in Cambodia
p. 68
The Myall Creek Memorial: history, identity and reconciliation
p. 82
Wartime internment sites
p. 97
Cowra Japanese War Cemetery
p. 99
A cave in Taiwan: comfort women's memories and the local identity
p. 114
Postcolonial shame: heritage and the forgotten pain of civilian women internees in Java
p. 128
Difficult memories: the independence struggle as cultural heritage in East Timor
p. 144
Civil and political prisons
p. 163
Port Arthur, Norfolk Island, New Caledonia: convict prison islands in the Antipodes
p. 165
Hoa Lo Museum, Hanoi: changing attitudes to a Vietnamese place of pain and shame
p. 182
Places of pain as tools for social justice in the ‘new’ South Africa: black heritage preservation in the ‘rainbow’ nation's townships
p. 198
Negotiating places of pain in post-conflict Northern Ireland: debating the future of the Maze prison/Long Kesh
p. 215
Places of benevolent internment
p. 231
Beauty springing from the breast of pain
p. 233
‘No less than a palace’: Kew Asylum, its planned surrounds, and its present-day residents
p. 247
Between the hostel and the detention centre: possible trajectories of migrant pain and shame in Australia
p. 263
Index
p. 281
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