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

Lindsay Anne Balfour

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.

Keywords


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

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



Copyright (c) 2020 Lindsay Anne Balfour

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Museum and Society

ISSN 1479-8360

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