Ground Zero Revisited – Museums and Materiality in an Age of Global Pandemic

Authors

  • Lindsay Anne Balfour Coventry University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i3.3532

Keywords:

COVID-19, 9/11, Ground Zero, autoimmunity, digital memory

Abstract

This paper examines the potential of convergence technologies in the process of 9/11 memorialization, particularly when materiality and its absence are so crucial to the in-situ narrative of post terror attack. Questions over the incorporation of virtual and digital media are not new in the context of COVID-19 but are perhaps more urgent than ever, as we all begin to grapple with the turn to technology as a surrogate for what we cannot physically provide. In particular, I trace the Derridean phenomenon of autoimmunity to draw parallels between memorial practices associated with both 9/11 and COVID-19. Ultimately, the migration online initiated by global pandemic reminds us that traumatic memory in particular is punctuated by gaps and absences; it insists on the recognition of other, stranger, incomplete and imperfect ways of knowing and commemorating.

Author Biography

Lindsay Anne Balfour, Coventry University

Dr. Lindsay Balfour is Assistant Professor of Digital Media in the Centre for Postdogital Cultures at Coventry University. Her research explores the social implications of artificial intelligence and machine learning in relation to memory and popular culture, wearable tech, and the anthropocentrism of sentient code. Dr. Balfour completed her PhD at the University of British Columbia with the support of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and was an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at the September 11 Memorial and Museum and New York University. She is the author of Hospitality in a Time of Terror: Strangers at the Gate (2017).

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Published

14.10.2020

How to Cite

Balfour, L. A. (2020). Ground Zero Revisited – Museums and Materiality in an Age of Global Pandemic. Museum & Society, 18(3), 302–304. https://doi.org/10.29311/mas.v18i3.3532