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CITIES AND MEMORY: CONSTRUCTION OF SOCIAL SPACE
AND THE MNEMONICS OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Hunter Reinhardt
UW Dept. of History
HSTRY 494
Prof. Elena Campbell
11 December 2016
Reinhardt 1
CITIES AND MEMORY: SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF SPACE
AND THE MNEMONICS OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
In 2008, the world passed an important threshold; for the first time in the history of
civilization, a majority of the world’s population lived in urban environments.1 Cities are not a
new phenomenon any more than collectivity and human relations are; yet, for the first time in
human history, most of the world lived in urban built environments, and this fact has largely
come to define the conduct and context of modern civilization. The implications of global
urbanization are multidisciplinary, and express themselves across an exhaustive number fields
through an equally exhaustive number of vehicles. The social construction of space—the
imbuing of physical geography with meaning—has become a major consideration in not only the
development of urban space, but also in the understanding of personal and communal
experiences and identities.2 Though the subject is ostensibly rooted in geography and sociology,
the intrinsic elements of social space—as well as how it is formed, maintained, and changed over
time—are necessarily and inextricably connected to history through the memorialization and
imbuement of meaning in built environments. From the Viennese coffee houses, which stood as
a defining element of Austrian intellectual and social culture,3 to the innumerable culturally
unique variations of temples—pagodas, synagogues, wats, and every other unique permutation of
symbolic and religious architecture—the cultural construction of meaning in space is illustrated
through the dialectic understanding of architecture and human communalism.
1
Xing Quan Zhang, "The Trends, Promises and Challenges of Urbanisation in the World," Habitat
International 54 (2016): 241.
2
Łukasz Stanek, Henri Lefebvre on Space Architecture, Urban Research, and the Production of Theory
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,2011).
3
Robert Norton, Secret Germany: Stefan George and His Circle (Ithaca,N.Y.:Cornell University Press,
2002), 95. Austrian writer Stefan Zweig famously defined it as a special sort of institution, which
represented a “sort of democratic club, open to everyone for the price of a cheap cup of coffee,where
every guest can sit for hours with this little offering, to talk, write, play cards,receive post, and above all
consume an unlimited number of newspapers and journals.”
Reinhardt 2
As such an expansive and comprehensive topic, a holistic understanding of the social
construction of space in urban built environments—in short, cities and memory—must
necessarily stem from a variety of fields. This paper will assess the historiographic
understandings of memory in urban landscapes through three prisms: social geography,
architectural history, and archaeological representations of the two. The three books under
consideration here all provide valuable insight into the methodology, practicality, and teleology
of memory in urban space, both in terms of the theoretical underpinnings of collective memory
and the applications of theory in empirical evidence. By comparing these books’ presentations on
Lefebvrian space, monumental memory, and the continuity of meaning through dialectic
conflicts, a meaningful interpretation of cities and memory is elucidated through the
understanding of the core mechanics of memorialization—specifically, the dialectic contestation
of memory through the social construction of space.
One of the most expansive subjects regarding the social construction of space—
sociological geography—is the lens through which urban historian Dolores Hayden presents The
Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History.4 Based largely on her Los Angeles project
of the same name, which she founded in 1984 and directed for eight years, Hayden presents a
call to action for urban designers and preservationists to orient their work towards considerations
of space. Her argument, in the context of both her work with the Power of Place project and the
book, is that LA’s historic and cultural identity lacked a “socially inclusive landscape history,”
and thus omitted an important ‘human’ element in its planned environment.5 The book itself is
4
Dolores Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes asPublic History (Cambridge: MIT Press,
1995).
5
Ibid., 12.
Reinhardt 3
structured as first a theoretical exploration of “place memory,”6 and then an illustration of theory
in practice. The first part of her book, “Claiming Urban Landscapes as Public History,”
documents the historiographic understandings of public history as it is elucidated in the context
of modern geography; primarily, this means the dialectics of identity, biopolitics, and the broader
implications of meaning in space, as well as why “social and aesthetic perspectives on the
historic built environment have traditionally been fragmented.”7 Hayden establishes the primary
constructions of memory in the built environment to be the result of dialectic politics of space,
and claims that urban landscapes are vehicles of meaningful and substantial exegeses of public
history. The second part of her book, “Los Angeles: Public Pasts in the Downtown Landscape,”
explores the politics of space and mnemonic urban landscapes in the context of LA’s historic
districts, as well as in a thorough case study of the homestead and memorial of “Grandma”
Biddy Mason, a laywoman who served as an important and massively influential communal
matron in the mid-19th century African American community of LA. Here she turns to the work
of her organization’s project, which largely aimed to reconstruct perceptions of the city by
making visible the marginalized history of the city’s working-class, ethnic, and female
populations.8 Hayden’s exploration of the Biddy Mason case is particularly enlightening, as it
documents how the memorialization of her legacy was constructed physically and socially, as
well as how it was received and interpreted by the public at large.
Hayden’s exploration of the power of place is an important window through which the
interface of memory and the urban environment can—and, as Hayden argues, should—be
6
Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes asPublic History,46. The concept of “place memory”
is attributed by Hayden to philosopher Edward S. Casey, who postulated that memory was naturally
place-oriented, and represented the human ability to connect with both the built and the natural
environment.
7
Ibid., xii-xiii.
8
Ibid., 83-238.
Reinhardt 4
viewed. Nicely illustrated and written as personal experience, Hayden’s call for sociopolitical
revisionism in designing and understanding urban environments only falls short in terms of
subjectivity. Although she ties the subject and content of the book strongly to her work with the
Power of Place project in LA and states her involvement in the process of defining the
organization’s mission,9 she does little to address the subjectivity her work and research entails
in terms of historiographic revisionism. The structure of the book, though ostensibly
straightforward, changes sharply in the latter half as Hayden explains the various projects her
organization was involved in without referencing the theoretical understandings set forth in the
first part of her book. She even addresses this weakness in the preface of the book, explaining
that, as a construction, “a book does not easily reflect the iterative process of working with
abstract ideas in social contexts, where practice informs theory as much as the other way
around.”10 However, this deficiency is addressed and, to some extent, overcome in the final
chapters of her book, wherein she draws connections between her work and the social-
geographic rhetoric detailed extensively in the former part of her book. Overall, Hayden aptly
defends her interpretation of urban landscapes as being representative both of collective memory
and public history, and provides a key illustration of the interactivity of urban space and
memory, both theoretically and practically.
Fairfield University historian Gavriel Rosenfeld explores a somewhat narrower, if no less
ambitious, subject. Stemming from the same understandings of social construction of space
9
Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes asPublic History,xi. Hayden prefaces the book by
asserting that “[the book] is an extended reflection on [her] eight years of experience in both research and
practice, an exploration of how the social history of urban space may lead to public history and public
art,” as well an explanation of her organization’s mission to “situate women’s history and ethnic history
in downtown, in public places, through experimental, collaborative projects by historians, designers, and
artists.
10
Ibid., xiv.
Reinhardt 5
explored by Hayden, but contextualized in the field of architectural history, Rosenfeld’s Munich
and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the Third Reich is an intriguing and
thoroughly thought-out documentation of Munich’s built environment, and how its urban
landscape reflected a reluctance and ultimate inability to properly address the memory of Nazism
in the Haupstadt der Bewegung, the ‘Capital of the Movement’.11 Drawing extensively on the
architectural legacies of the city, Rosenfeld documents the physical memorialization of Munich’s
cultural identity through four vectors: the reconstruction, restoration, and preservation of existing
or destroyed buildings; construction of new buildings in the city, and the elements and dialectical
nature of postwar architecture; Nazi architecture, and how the physical reminders of the Third
Reich were handled; and the demolition, restoration and, most importantly, the erection of new
monuments pertaining to the Nazi past.12 Though potent in their own elucidation, these elements
become especially meaningful to the discussion of cities and memory through Rosenfeld’s
examination and comparison of them through three periods of Munich’s architectural biography.
Rosenfeld shows that throughout the restoration (1945-1958), modern (1958 -1975) and
postmodern (1975-2000) periods, the built environment of the city was a sociopolitical
battleground between traditionalist and modernist forces, both of which—much to Rosenfeld’s
obvious chagrin—denied the centrality of Nazism in Munich's history.13 How Munich failed to
address its Nazi past in its urban architectural vernacular, according to Rosenfeld, represents the
fact that Vergangensheitsbewältegung—“the process of coming to terms with or mastering the
11
Gavriel Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the Third Reich
(Berkeley: University of California Press,2000).
12
Ibid., 6-7.
13
Ibid., 8-9, 304. “No matter how much competition there has been over the legacy of the Third Reich…
a careful survey of Munich’s postwar urban development strongly suggests that, in the final analysis, the
city has generally adhered to a traditionalist view of the Nazi past.” “In short, only this conservative
strategy of coming to terms with the past seemed able to effectively suppress Munich’s past as the
Haupstadt de Bewegung.”
Reinhardt 6
past”14—has no clear point of termination; rather, it is constantly played out and contested in the
construction of urban space.
Rosenfeld divides Munich and Memory into three parts, each dealing with one of the
aforementioned timeframes: restoration, modernism, and postmodernism. Within each of these
subdivisions, the rough outline of each part is relatively formulaic. The first chapter of each part
addresses the rough definitions of these frameworks’ stylistic and ideological characteristics, as
well as the sociological and cultural ‘roots’ of each era—that is, how these frameworks are
characterized in the physical and social landscape of the urban environment. This is followed by
explorations of the specifics of Munich’s architecture in relation to the city’s ‘mnemonic’
history, and how the physical geography of the city interacts with the socially constructed
narrative expressed in the urban architectural vernacular. Rosenfeld dedicates one chapter each
to the historic preservation, postwar architecture, Nazi architecture, and monuments of each era,
with the exception of the final part— “Postmodernism, 1975-2000”—which groups together the
architectural legacies of the Third Reich with the collective built environments of the city. The
structure of the book lends itself well to Rosenfeld’s primary argument that the collective
memory and socially-constructed space of a city is explicated in the contestation of space and the
“constancy of mnemonic competition,”15 and is shaped indefinitely through interpretations and
localizations of memory. By exploring the same architectural and mnemonic elements
throughout Munich’s postwar history, Rosenfeld demonstrates that the history of the city is
inundated with—and largely defined by—the same sociocultural and historiographic themes,
particularly the contention of modernist and traditionalist forces and the unwillingness (or
inability) to meaningfully address the Nazi legacy.
14
Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,1.
15
Ibid., 7-8.
Reinhardt 7
His insistence on the latter theme, however, represents a considerable weakness of the
book and its central argument. Although he does aptly describe how Münchners did little to
admonish (or even acknowledge) the Nazi legacy of the city, his insistence on its centrality
becomes tedious well before the end of the book. What he demands of the city—that it present
itself physically as a place dedicated to the "jarring of memory" so that the legacy of the Third
Reich remains vividly fresh and present16—is, holistically, unrealistic. It is impractical to assume
that the entire population of Munich was (or even should be) motivated by moral or
philosophical introspection. Overall, however, he does well to address the contestation of space
and memory in the city and to assert its importance in the institutionalization and construction of
social space.
Having explored both the socio-geographic and architectural understandings of cities and
memory, it is important to identify how these fields interact and overlap: in what ways, or
through which conceptualizations, can the two be synthesized? Ömür Harmanşah’s Cities and
the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East provides an interesting illustration in
consideration of this question, as it explores the construction of social space through the prism of
archaeology.17 This field constitutes an important and particularly unique factor in the study of
urban memory and the construction of space, as it allows for both the examination of historic
processes of social construction and—more idiosyncratically—the foundation of cities and urban
centers. Harmanşah sets out with these considerations in mind, and quickly establishes the
foundation of cities as being an invaluable addition to the discussion of socially constructed
space and memory. To Harmanşah, the founding of cities is a "negotiated, dialectic process"; by
16
Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,313.
17
Ömür Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press,2013).
Reinhardt 8
contextualizing the short-term agency of political elites within “longer-term settlement trends,
landscape processes, and broader environmental histories,” his monograph aims to develop an
understanding of the nature of space-producing similar to those espoused by Rosenfeld and
Hayden.18 Through detailed architectural and archaeological analysis of ancient Mesopotamian
build sites, as well as thorough explorations of ancient texts pertinent to the discussion of social
space in the construction of cities, Harmanşah demonstrates that city foundations of the royal
elite in Assyria and the Syro-Hittite polities are “reappropriations of existing places of cultural
significance into coherent, state-sponsored urban construction projects,” and that constructing the
urban landscape “entailed the gradual building up of public spaces through the making of
ceremonial and ritual spaces.”19
The structure of the book is somewhat more fragmented than the works of Rosenfeld and
Hayden. The introductory chapter makes it clear what philosophical influences shape the
presentation, and outlines Harmanşah’s thesis—the sociological exegesis of Syro-Hittite city-
founding. Harmanşah then turns, in chapters 2 and 3, to the archaeological data and landscape
geography used for analysis and interpretation, establishing the contextual built and natural
environments in which space is socially constructed. After providing the larger geographic and
historic context of his study—the larger regional landscapes in which the main cities discussed
are to be found—Harmanşah explores the sociocultural meaning of monuments, urban space, and
spatial narratives of identity, citing and explicating case studies such as Carchemish, Nineveh,
and Kalhu. In chapter 4, he synthesizes the contextual exposition of chapters 2 and 3 into a
broader sociological understanding by examining the spatial narratives promoted in the
monuments, urban spaces, and commemorative festivities of these ancient cities, concluding that
18
Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,5.
19
Ibid., 190-191.
Reinhardt 9
the steles and orthostated architecture that constituted the mnemonic vernacular were defined
through the interface of political discourse and the social construction of space.20 Drawing
directly from Henri Lefebvre’s pioneering work in the field of social geography, Harmanşah
asserts the centrality of social-spatiality in understanding the construction of a city in the context
of the ancient Near East.21 Chapter 5 is loosely constructed as an examination of architectural
technologies and the poetics of urban space, and examines the depositional practices, urban
environment, and landscape architecture of Syro-Mesopotamian societies, drawing from the
same vehicles of exegesis discussed in chapter 4. Harmanşah then concludes with a broad
summation of both his work and the normative interpretations of social space that Cities and the
Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East endorses. This latter point is perhaps Harmanşah’s
most important contribution to the discussion of socially constructed space, as it promotes the
understanding of cities as social products of space that encapsulate the surrounding environment,
past traditions, architecture, historical meaning, and ultimately the desires of their rulers: as
Harmanşah overarchingly demonstrates, “the practices of historical commemoration in buildings
make use of socially recognized systems of representation, both textual and pictorial, and operate
at a societal level of historical consciousness and collective memory."22
Where Harmanşah’s monograph falls short, however, is in terms of the interconnectivity
of his interpretations. While he does offer a sufficient array of published and known results from
20
Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,134. "With a critical
understanding of the distribution and configuration of monuments in public spaces,spatial narratives
allow us to reflect on the relationship between political discourse and landscape, between colonial power
and the making of space,between state monuments and collective memory."
21
Ibid., 104-108. Henri Lefebvre’s hallmark study, The Production of Urban Space (1974),is widely
considered to be one of the most foundational works of social geography. Lefebvre particularly
emphasized the conceptualization of urban space as a social product; his work will be discussed in full on
page 10
22
Ibid,, 185.
Reinhardt 10
several sites and regions in the Near East to lay out the case, his presentation is not explicative in
exactly how landscapes, nature, abandoned settlements, and architectural histories combine, at
such various scales, to allow meaning to emerge at these specific sites. The fragmented structure
of his book—while addressing a wide variety of ways in which memory may emerge—does little
to describe how memory does emerge, specifically in a way that constitutes a cohesive societal
consensus or collective memory. Additionally, his citation of the sociological works and
understandings of space of Henri Lefebvre (among others) breeds a necessary air of caution; it is
conceptually difficult to take a method based on 20th-century ideas (necessarily products of their
time) and apply it to past cases, especially considering ambiguous data that does not lend itself
easily to understanding urban meaning and identity. Asserting, for instance, that the orthostatic
masonry techniques of the Middle Bronze Age urban landscapes have direct mnemonic and
representational meaning, and constitute “symbolically charged technological [styles] that gave
shape and meaning to [Syro-Mesopotamian] urban spaces”23—without adequately illustrating
how it provides shape and meaning—falls just short of teleological pigeonholing. This is not to
say that Harmanşah’s work is invalidated by ascribing modern values to ancient traditions.
Rather, it illustrates that the diverse multidisciplinary interpretations of socially constructed
space are rooted historiographically in poststructuralist understandings of urban space and
identity and their contextual environments.
Each author presents a unique prism through which the social construction of urban space
and the mnemonics of the built environment are refracted. Their idiosyncrasies—both in terms of
their content and of the fields from which they originate—are overshadowed by a number of key
similarities, which provide a broader synthesis of how cities and memory are interconnected.
23
Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,178.
Reinhardt 11
Each study, for instance, though rooted in varied fields and dealing with independent subjects,
relied heavily on the conventions of Lefebvrian social, political, and economic geography. Henri
Lefebvre’s understandings of space as a necessarily social product—and his elucidations of
representations of space, representational space, and spatial practice—inundate many discussions
of social memory and space.24 Of the monographs considered in this essay, Harmanşah addresses
these elements most directly; his assertion that the practice of founding of cities rests on the
convergence of “(a) the utopic ideals of the imperial agents, (b) the social significations of space,
and (c) the material practices of the society” directly parallels Lefebvre’s understandings.25
Similarly, Hayden’s discussions of the theoretical implications of socially constructed space
draw from concepts of Lefebvrian space, albeit from a more selective reading of his work. Her
interpretation of social reproduction as being expressed through the built urban environment—
defined in turn by the dialectic politics of space—is directly drawn from Lefebvre’s
understanding of political and economic geography, which argues that every society in history
“has shaped a distinctive social space that meets its intertwined requirements for economic
production and social reproduction.”26 Rosenfeld’s monograph is the only of the three that does
not directly cite Lefebvrian concepts; however, the author’s description of conflictual memory—
expressed, as he effectively argues, through the physically built environment of the city—closely
parallels Lefebvre’s understanding that social space is “a means of human reappropriation
through the development of counter-spaces forged by artistic expression and social resistance.”27
24
Stuart Elden, Understanding Henri Lefebvre: Theory and the Possible (Continuum Studies in
Philosophy, London; New York: Continuum, 2004).
25
Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,105.
26
Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, tr. Donald Nicholson-Smith (Oxford, England, and
Cambridge, Mass.:Basil Blackwell, 1991). Qtd. in Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as
Public History, 19.
27
Chris Butler. Henri Lefebvre: Spatial Politics, Everyday Life and the Right to the City.Nomikoi.
Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2012.
Reinhardt 12
The ubiquity of Lefebvrian concepts, terminology, and understandings across all three books
demonstrates the pervasiveness of his work through the interactivity of urbanism and memory;
holistically, the dialectic of place is dominated by the considerations of how societies imbue
space with meaning.
A second consideration in synthesis of these sources is their consideration of specifically
and purposefully mnemonically-charged urban environments—in short, monuments and other
vehicles of physical memorialization. Here the most obvious illustrations are evident in
Rosenfeld’s work, as his monograph largely focuses on the mnemonic implications of the built
environment of Munich. Specifically, Rosenfeld thoroughly documents the sociocultural
relevance and implications of monuments through his extensive inventory and analysis of
postwar monuments; his presentation of the subject of monuments is a meaningful one, as it
establishes both the normative expectations of memorialization and examples of its failure.
While defining monuments as “designed exclusively to serve memory,” and recognizing that “it
is less what monuments represent than the reasons why they are erected that sheds light upon the
construction of local memory,” he also rightly notes that many monuments are ineffective
because they are hidden away, badly sited, or include ambiguous texts, and thus do not serve the
purpose of creating or shaping critical collective memory.28 By conflating this inefficacy with
Munich’s “inability to mourn,” Rosenfeld implicitly establishes monuments as being a direct
representation of social space and collective memory. Harmanşah continues in a similar vein by
describing the social narratives espoused by commemorative monuments concomitant with the
urban construction projects of Iron Age Syro-Mesopotamian cities. Drawing again from
Lefebvrian thought, Harmanşah claims the sociocultural importance of monuments is
28
Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,107-147.
Reinhardt 13
exemplified in their displaying of ideologically charged narratives of the state into sites of public
gathering and ritual practice, and that monuments actively represent the dialectic of space
production through their dynamic reorientation of culture and rituality along public dimensions.29
Hayden’s commentary on the interactivity of the built environment and social memory
through the vehicle of monuments is less explicit, but holistically represents a broad synthesis of
Rosenfeld’s and Harmanşah’s understandings of monuments. Hayden’s Power of Place project—
as discussed earlier—aimed to restructure the paradigmatic understandings of Los Angeles’
public history and collective memory through the pluralistic ‘revealing’ of marginalized
histories. The organization’s call to action (and, consequently, Hayden’s) was to allow
communities to collectively define their past, present and future through the reinterpretation of
built environments; the memorialization of Biddy Mason’s homestead and the shaping of
collective memory in “Little Tokyo” both represent such attempts at sociocultural
‘revisionism’.30 Mnemonic physical environments, accordingly, represent a union of Rosenfeld’s
normativity—with regards to what monuments should intrinsically represent—and Harmanşah’s
expression of power in space. The holistic understanding of monuments as social vehicles is thus
necessary to the exploration of cities and memory, as it represents both a bidirectional link
between the two and the normative implications of socially constructed space.
If Lefebvrian thought and a discourse on the meaning of monuments are defining
elements in the relationship of urban environments and memory—which, as this essay has
argued, they are—then what, in turn, defines these overarching themes? The answer lies in
understanding the theoretical underpinnings of both subjects; at the root of both physical
memorialization and the broad school of Lefebvrian thought is the dialectic contestation of
29
Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East, 152.
30
Hayden, The Power of Place,82-240
Reinhardt 14
memory. The former—physical memorialization—is best summarized by Pierre Nora’s
conceptualizations of lieux de mémoire, which holds that the memorialization of history in
physicality represents “a turning point where consciousness of a break with the past is bound up
with the sense that memory has been torn—but torn in such a way as to pose the problem of the
embodiment of memory in certain sites where a sense of historical continuity persists.”31 Central
to history, according to Nora, is “a critical discourse that is antithetical to spontaneous memory,”
which establishes lieux de mémoire as phenomenal and abstract, and necessarily subject to
teleological subjectivity.32 Lefebvre’s understandings similarly reflect the dialectic contestation
of memory, as the social production of space is defined through both the reproduction of society
through social action and the “unequal, unbalanced distribution of agencies at work in the
making of urban space.”33 Lefebvre, in the same vein as Nora, also conceptualizes mnemonic
environments and artifacts as being “concrete abstractions”: paradoxical representations of the
interface of history and memory.34 Through understanding the mechanics of Lefebvrian social
space and physical mnemonics, the theoretical interactivity of cities and socially constructed
space becomes evident in the conflictual nature and continued discourse of memory.
The elements of the dialectic contestation of memory are expressed in many ways, but
nonetheless are present in nearly all considerations of the construction of space and memory. For
Rosenfeld, this is the constant contention between traditionalist and modernist forces in the
shaping of Munich’s built and socially constructed urban environment. The fragmented
conceptualization of local memory—predominantly favoring traditionalism, but nonetheless far
from monolithic—shapes the discourse throughout Rosenfeld’s study; in all three timeframes, he
31
Pierre Nora,"Between Memory and History: Les Lieux De Mémoire," Representations 26 (1989): 7-24.
32
Ibid., 7.
33
Łukasz, Henri Lefebvre on Space Architecture,Urban Research,and the Production of Theory,133-35.
34
Ibid., 136.
Reinhardt 15
characterizes Munich’s architectural legacy and cultural identity as being defined by “the
constancy of mnemonic competition.”35 In the context of Hayden’s work—both her LA project
and The Power of Place—the contestation of memory is the defining element in the theoretical
and philosophical platform from which her objectives stem. In bringing together planners, artist,
historians, geographers, activists, and members of the community to collectively ‘reveal’ LA’s
communal memory by realigning development of the built environment towards considerations
of Lefebvrian space, Hayden intrinsically (and explicitly) establishes her work as a counter-
memory to traditionalist Anglo-American history that dominates historic architectural
preservationism, and thus the mnemonic vernacular of the city.36 Even in ancient Syro-
Mesopotamian societies, as Harmanşah argues, the architectural legacy and social history is
shaped by the interaction of political discourse and collective social activity.37 The construction
of space in ancient urban centers, shaped largely by the interface of imperial cosmopolitanism
and vernacular social practices of Iron Age society, conveyed conflictual implications of short-
term political motivations and long-term considerations of settlement trends and societal
processes.
Considering all three monographs in tandem, the key mechanic of social
memorialization, and of the mnemonic imbuement of meaning in the built environment of cities,
is revealed to be the necessarily conflictual nature of memory. This foundational method of
mnemonic construction, though potent in its own right, is more meaningful in its ubiquity and
35
Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,8. This competition is present throughout his discussion, with small
idiosyncratic variances between timeframes. In the immediate post-war era,it is conflicting impulses
towards restoration and renewal that represents this conflict; in the modernist period, it is the conflict
between populist historic preservation movements and actors of revisionist reconstruction; and in the
postmodernist period, it is the recontestation of the modernist memory of the Third Reich that stigmatized
architectural tradition.
36
Hayden, The Power of Place,245.
37
Harmansah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,102-153.
Reinhardt 16
fundamentality across multiple subjects, disciplines, and conceptualizations. The context of this
discussion has been of multidisciplinary and dialectic exploration into the implications of global
urbanism; the importance of this topic, accordingly, is expressed through several independent
fields of research, and its relevance is implicated in the consideration of these fields as
interconnected and meaningfully complex subjects. In a world that is increasingly and
objectively defined by urbanism—both socioculturally and demographically—the
historiographic understandings of memory bear a significant weight in pursuit of understanding
not only the contemporaneous contexts of the past and present, but also in the exploration of
what it means to be a communally-defined species. Memory, in other words, is an important
window into the one universal constant in civilization as we know it: the condition of being
human.
Reinhardt 17
Bibliography
Butler, Chris. Henri Lefebvre: Spatial Politics, Everyday Life and the Right to the City. Nomikoi.
Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2012.
Elden, Stuart. Understanding Henri Lefebvre: Theory and the Possible. Continuum Studies in
Philosophy. London; New York: Continuum, 2004.
Harmanşah, Ömür. Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Hayden, Dolores. The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History. Cambridge: MIT
Press, 1995.
Nora, Pierre. "Between Memory and History: Les Lieux De Mémoire." Representations, no. 26
(1989): 7-24.
Norton, Robert Edward. Secret Germany: Stefan George and His Circle. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell
University Press, 2002.
Rosenfeld, Gavriel David. Munich and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the
Third Reich. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.
Stanek, Łukasz. Henri Lefebvre on Space Architecture, Urban Research, and the Production of
Theory. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2011.
Zhang, Xing Quan. "The Trends, Promises and Challenges of Urbanisation in the World."
Habitat International 54 (2016): 241-52.

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Cities and Memory - Construction of Social Spaces and the Mnemonics of the Built Environment

  • 1. CITIES AND MEMORY: CONSTRUCTION OF SOCIAL SPACE AND THE MNEMONICS OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT Hunter Reinhardt UW Dept. of History HSTRY 494 Prof. Elena Campbell 11 December 2016
  • 2. Reinhardt 1 CITIES AND MEMORY: SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF SPACE AND THE MNEMONICS OF THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT In 2008, the world passed an important threshold; for the first time in the history of civilization, a majority of the world’s population lived in urban environments.1 Cities are not a new phenomenon any more than collectivity and human relations are; yet, for the first time in human history, most of the world lived in urban built environments, and this fact has largely come to define the conduct and context of modern civilization. The implications of global urbanization are multidisciplinary, and express themselves across an exhaustive number fields through an equally exhaustive number of vehicles. The social construction of space—the imbuing of physical geography with meaning—has become a major consideration in not only the development of urban space, but also in the understanding of personal and communal experiences and identities.2 Though the subject is ostensibly rooted in geography and sociology, the intrinsic elements of social space—as well as how it is formed, maintained, and changed over time—are necessarily and inextricably connected to history through the memorialization and imbuement of meaning in built environments. From the Viennese coffee houses, which stood as a defining element of Austrian intellectual and social culture,3 to the innumerable culturally unique variations of temples—pagodas, synagogues, wats, and every other unique permutation of symbolic and religious architecture—the cultural construction of meaning in space is illustrated through the dialectic understanding of architecture and human communalism. 1 Xing Quan Zhang, "The Trends, Promises and Challenges of Urbanisation in the World," Habitat International 54 (2016): 241. 2 Łukasz Stanek, Henri Lefebvre on Space Architecture, Urban Research, and the Production of Theory (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,2011). 3 Robert Norton, Secret Germany: Stefan George and His Circle (Ithaca,N.Y.:Cornell University Press, 2002), 95. Austrian writer Stefan Zweig famously defined it as a special sort of institution, which represented a “sort of democratic club, open to everyone for the price of a cheap cup of coffee,where every guest can sit for hours with this little offering, to talk, write, play cards,receive post, and above all consume an unlimited number of newspapers and journals.”
  • 3. Reinhardt 2 As such an expansive and comprehensive topic, a holistic understanding of the social construction of space in urban built environments—in short, cities and memory—must necessarily stem from a variety of fields. This paper will assess the historiographic understandings of memory in urban landscapes through three prisms: social geography, architectural history, and archaeological representations of the two. The three books under consideration here all provide valuable insight into the methodology, practicality, and teleology of memory in urban space, both in terms of the theoretical underpinnings of collective memory and the applications of theory in empirical evidence. By comparing these books’ presentations on Lefebvrian space, monumental memory, and the continuity of meaning through dialectic conflicts, a meaningful interpretation of cities and memory is elucidated through the understanding of the core mechanics of memorialization—specifically, the dialectic contestation of memory through the social construction of space. One of the most expansive subjects regarding the social construction of space— sociological geography—is the lens through which urban historian Dolores Hayden presents The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History.4 Based largely on her Los Angeles project of the same name, which she founded in 1984 and directed for eight years, Hayden presents a call to action for urban designers and preservationists to orient their work towards considerations of space. Her argument, in the context of both her work with the Power of Place project and the book, is that LA’s historic and cultural identity lacked a “socially inclusive landscape history,” and thus omitted an important ‘human’ element in its planned environment.5 The book itself is 4 Dolores Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes asPublic History (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995). 5 Ibid., 12.
  • 4. Reinhardt 3 structured as first a theoretical exploration of “place memory,”6 and then an illustration of theory in practice. The first part of her book, “Claiming Urban Landscapes as Public History,” documents the historiographic understandings of public history as it is elucidated in the context of modern geography; primarily, this means the dialectics of identity, biopolitics, and the broader implications of meaning in space, as well as why “social and aesthetic perspectives on the historic built environment have traditionally been fragmented.”7 Hayden establishes the primary constructions of memory in the built environment to be the result of dialectic politics of space, and claims that urban landscapes are vehicles of meaningful and substantial exegeses of public history. The second part of her book, “Los Angeles: Public Pasts in the Downtown Landscape,” explores the politics of space and mnemonic urban landscapes in the context of LA’s historic districts, as well as in a thorough case study of the homestead and memorial of “Grandma” Biddy Mason, a laywoman who served as an important and massively influential communal matron in the mid-19th century African American community of LA. Here she turns to the work of her organization’s project, which largely aimed to reconstruct perceptions of the city by making visible the marginalized history of the city’s working-class, ethnic, and female populations.8 Hayden’s exploration of the Biddy Mason case is particularly enlightening, as it documents how the memorialization of her legacy was constructed physically and socially, as well as how it was received and interpreted by the public at large. Hayden’s exploration of the power of place is an important window through which the interface of memory and the urban environment can—and, as Hayden argues, should—be 6 Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes asPublic History,46. The concept of “place memory” is attributed by Hayden to philosopher Edward S. Casey, who postulated that memory was naturally place-oriented, and represented the human ability to connect with both the built and the natural environment. 7 Ibid., xii-xiii. 8 Ibid., 83-238.
  • 5. Reinhardt 4 viewed. Nicely illustrated and written as personal experience, Hayden’s call for sociopolitical revisionism in designing and understanding urban environments only falls short in terms of subjectivity. Although she ties the subject and content of the book strongly to her work with the Power of Place project in LA and states her involvement in the process of defining the organization’s mission,9 she does little to address the subjectivity her work and research entails in terms of historiographic revisionism. The structure of the book, though ostensibly straightforward, changes sharply in the latter half as Hayden explains the various projects her organization was involved in without referencing the theoretical understandings set forth in the first part of her book. She even addresses this weakness in the preface of the book, explaining that, as a construction, “a book does not easily reflect the iterative process of working with abstract ideas in social contexts, where practice informs theory as much as the other way around.”10 However, this deficiency is addressed and, to some extent, overcome in the final chapters of her book, wherein she draws connections between her work and the social- geographic rhetoric detailed extensively in the former part of her book. Overall, Hayden aptly defends her interpretation of urban landscapes as being representative both of collective memory and public history, and provides a key illustration of the interactivity of urban space and memory, both theoretically and practically. Fairfield University historian Gavriel Rosenfeld explores a somewhat narrower, if no less ambitious, subject. Stemming from the same understandings of social construction of space 9 Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes asPublic History,xi. Hayden prefaces the book by asserting that “[the book] is an extended reflection on [her] eight years of experience in both research and practice, an exploration of how the social history of urban space may lead to public history and public art,” as well an explanation of her organization’s mission to “situate women’s history and ethnic history in downtown, in public places, through experimental, collaborative projects by historians, designers, and artists. 10 Ibid., xiv.
  • 6. Reinhardt 5 explored by Hayden, but contextualized in the field of architectural history, Rosenfeld’s Munich and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the Third Reich is an intriguing and thoroughly thought-out documentation of Munich’s built environment, and how its urban landscape reflected a reluctance and ultimate inability to properly address the memory of Nazism in the Haupstadt der Bewegung, the ‘Capital of the Movement’.11 Drawing extensively on the architectural legacies of the city, Rosenfeld documents the physical memorialization of Munich’s cultural identity through four vectors: the reconstruction, restoration, and preservation of existing or destroyed buildings; construction of new buildings in the city, and the elements and dialectical nature of postwar architecture; Nazi architecture, and how the physical reminders of the Third Reich were handled; and the demolition, restoration and, most importantly, the erection of new monuments pertaining to the Nazi past.12 Though potent in their own elucidation, these elements become especially meaningful to the discussion of cities and memory through Rosenfeld’s examination and comparison of them through three periods of Munich’s architectural biography. Rosenfeld shows that throughout the restoration (1945-1958), modern (1958 -1975) and postmodern (1975-2000) periods, the built environment of the city was a sociopolitical battleground between traditionalist and modernist forces, both of which—much to Rosenfeld’s obvious chagrin—denied the centrality of Nazism in Munich's history.13 How Munich failed to address its Nazi past in its urban architectural vernacular, according to Rosenfeld, represents the fact that Vergangensheitsbewältegung—“the process of coming to terms with or mastering the 11 Gavriel Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the Third Reich (Berkeley: University of California Press,2000). 12 Ibid., 6-7. 13 Ibid., 8-9, 304. “No matter how much competition there has been over the legacy of the Third Reich… a careful survey of Munich’s postwar urban development strongly suggests that, in the final analysis, the city has generally adhered to a traditionalist view of the Nazi past.” “In short, only this conservative strategy of coming to terms with the past seemed able to effectively suppress Munich’s past as the Haupstadt de Bewegung.”
  • 7. Reinhardt 6 past”14—has no clear point of termination; rather, it is constantly played out and contested in the construction of urban space. Rosenfeld divides Munich and Memory into three parts, each dealing with one of the aforementioned timeframes: restoration, modernism, and postmodernism. Within each of these subdivisions, the rough outline of each part is relatively formulaic. The first chapter of each part addresses the rough definitions of these frameworks’ stylistic and ideological characteristics, as well as the sociological and cultural ‘roots’ of each era—that is, how these frameworks are characterized in the physical and social landscape of the urban environment. This is followed by explorations of the specifics of Munich’s architecture in relation to the city’s ‘mnemonic’ history, and how the physical geography of the city interacts with the socially constructed narrative expressed in the urban architectural vernacular. Rosenfeld dedicates one chapter each to the historic preservation, postwar architecture, Nazi architecture, and monuments of each era, with the exception of the final part— “Postmodernism, 1975-2000”—which groups together the architectural legacies of the Third Reich with the collective built environments of the city. The structure of the book lends itself well to Rosenfeld’s primary argument that the collective memory and socially-constructed space of a city is explicated in the contestation of space and the “constancy of mnemonic competition,”15 and is shaped indefinitely through interpretations and localizations of memory. By exploring the same architectural and mnemonic elements throughout Munich’s postwar history, Rosenfeld demonstrates that the history of the city is inundated with—and largely defined by—the same sociocultural and historiographic themes, particularly the contention of modernist and traditionalist forces and the unwillingness (or inability) to meaningfully address the Nazi legacy. 14 Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,1. 15 Ibid., 7-8.
  • 8. Reinhardt 7 His insistence on the latter theme, however, represents a considerable weakness of the book and its central argument. Although he does aptly describe how Münchners did little to admonish (or even acknowledge) the Nazi legacy of the city, his insistence on its centrality becomes tedious well before the end of the book. What he demands of the city—that it present itself physically as a place dedicated to the "jarring of memory" so that the legacy of the Third Reich remains vividly fresh and present16—is, holistically, unrealistic. It is impractical to assume that the entire population of Munich was (or even should be) motivated by moral or philosophical introspection. Overall, however, he does well to address the contestation of space and memory in the city and to assert its importance in the institutionalization and construction of social space. Having explored both the socio-geographic and architectural understandings of cities and memory, it is important to identify how these fields interact and overlap: in what ways, or through which conceptualizations, can the two be synthesized? Ömür Harmanşah’s Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East provides an interesting illustration in consideration of this question, as it explores the construction of social space through the prism of archaeology.17 This field constitutes an important and particularly unique factor in the study of urban memory and the construction of space, as it allows for both the examination of historic processes of social construction and—more idiosyncratically—the foundation of cities and urban centers. Harmanşah sets out with these considerations in mind, and quickly establishes the foundation of cities as being an invaluable addition to the discussion of socially constructed space and memory. To Harmanşah, the founding of cities is a "negotiated, dialectic process"; by 16 Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,313. 17 Ömür Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,2013).
  • 9. Reinhardt 8 contextualizing the short-term agency of political elites within “longer-term settlement trends, landscape processes, and broader environmental histories,” his monograph aims to develop an understanding of the nature of space-producing similar to those espoused by Rosenfeld and Hayden.18 Through detailed architectural and archaeological analysis of ancient Mesopotamian build sites, as well as thorough explorations of ancient texts pertinent to the discussion of social space in the construction of cities, Harmanşah demonstrates that city foundations of the royal elite in Assyria and the Syro-Hittite polities are “reappropriations of existing places of cultural significance into coherent, state-sponsored urban construction projects,” and that constructing the urban landscape “entailed the gradual building up of public spaces through the making of ceremonial and ritual spaces.”19 The structure of the book is somewhat more fragmented than the works of Rosenfeld and Hayden. The introductory chapter makes it clear what philosophical influences shape the presentation, and outlines Harmanşah’s thesis—the sociological exegesis of Syro-Hittite city- founding. Harmanşah then turns, in chapters 2 and 3, to the archaeological data and landscape geography used for analysis and interpretation, establishing the contextual built and natural environments in which space is socially constructed. After providing the larger geographic and historic context of his study—the larger regional landscapes in which the main cities discussed are to be found—Harmanşah explores the sociocultural meaning of monuments, urban space, and spatial narratives of identity, citing and explicating case studies such as Carchemish, Nineveh, and Kalhu. In chapter 4, he synthesizes the contextual exposition of chapters 2 and 3 into a broader sociological understanding by examining the spatial narratives promoted in the monuments, urban spaces, and commemorative festivities of these ancient cities, concluding that 18 Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,5. 19 Ibid., 190-191.
  • 10. Reinhardt 9 the steles and orthostated architecture that constituted the mnemonic vernacular were defined through the interface of political discourse and the social construction of space.20 Drawing directly from Henri Lefebvre’s pioneering work in the field of social geography, Harmanşah asserts the centrality of social-spatiality in understanding the construction of a city in the context of the ancient Near East.21 Chapter 5 is loosely constructed as an examination of architectural technologies and the poetics of urban space, and examines the depositional practices, urban environment, and landscape architecture of Syro-Mesopotamian societies, drawing from the same vehicles of exegesis discussed in chapter 4. Harmanşah then concludes with a broad summation of both his work and the normative interpretations of social space that Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East endorses. This latter point is perhaps Harmanşah’s most important contribution to the discussion of socially constructed space, as it promotes the understanding of cities as social products of space that encapsulate the surrounding environment, past traditions, architecture, historical meaning, and ultimately the desires of their rulers: as Harmanşah overarchingly demonstrates, “the practices of historical commemoration in buildings make use of socially recognized systems of representation, both textual and pictorial, and operate at a societal level of historical consciousness and collective memory."22 Where Harmanşah’s monograph falls short, however, is in terms of the interconnectivity of his interpretations. While he does offer a sufficient array of published and known results from 20 Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,134. "With a critical understanding of the distribution and configuration of monuments in public spaces,spatial narratives allow us to reflect on the relationship between political discourse and landscape, between colonial power and the making of space,between state monuments and collective memory." 21 Ibid., 104-108. Henri Lefebvre’s hallmark study, The Production of Urban Space (1974),is widely considered to be one of the most foundational works of social geography. Lefebvre particularly emphasized the conceptualization of urban space as a social product; his work will be discussed in full on page 10 22 Ibid,, 185.
  • 11. Reinhardt 10 several sites and regions in the Near East to lay out the case, his presentation is not explicative in exactly how landscapes, nature, abandoned settlements, and architectural histories combine, at such various scales, to allow meaning to emerge at these specific sites. The fragmented structure of his book—while addressing a wide variety of ways in which memory may emerge—does little to describe how memory does emerge, specifically in a way that constitutes a cohesive societal consensus or collective memory. Additionally, his citation of the sociological works and understandings of space of Henri Lefebvre (among others) breeds a necessary air of caution; it is conceptually difficult to take a method based on 20th-century ideas (necessarily products of their time) and apply it to past cases, especially considering ambiguous data that does not lend itself easily to understanding urban meaning and identity. Asserting, for instance, that the orthostatic masonry techniques of the Middle Bronze Age urban landscapes have direct mnemonic and representational meaning, and constitute “symbolically charged technological [styles] that gave shape and meaning to [Syro-Mesopotamian] urban spaces”23—without adequately illustrating how it provides shape and meaning—falls just short of teleological pigeonholing. This is not to say that Harmanşah’s work is invalidated by ascribing modern values to ancient traditions. Rather, it illustrates that the diverse multidisciplinary interpretations of socially constructed space are rooted historiographically in poststructuralist understandings of urban space and identity and their contextual environments. Each author presents a unique prism through which the social construction of urban space and the mnemonics of the built environment are refracted. Their idiosyncrasies—both in terms of their content and of the fields from which they originate—are overshadowed by a number of key similarities, which provide a broader synthesis of how cities and memory are interconnected. 23 Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,178.
  • 12. Reinhardt 11 Each study, for instance, though rooted in varied fields and dealing with independent subjects, relied heavily on the conventions of Lefebvrian social, political, and economic geography. Henri Lefebvre’s understandings of space as a necessarily social product—and his elucidations of representations of space, representational space, and spatial practice—inundate many discussions of social memory and space.24 Of the monographs considered in this essay, Harmanşah addresses these elements most directly; his assertion that the practice of founding of cities rests on the convergence of “(a) the utopic ideals of the imperial agents, (b) the social significations of space, and (c) the material practices of the society” directly parallels Lefebvre’s understandings.25 Similarly, Hayden’s discussions of the theoretical implications of socially constructed space draw from concepts of Lefebvrian space, albeit from a more selective reading of his work. Her interpretation of social reproduction as being expressed through the built urban environment— defined in turn by the dialectic politics of space—is directly drawn from Lefebvre’s understanding of political and economic geography, which argues that every society in history “has shaped a distinctive social space that meets its intertwined requirements for economic production and social reproduction.”26 Rosenfeld’s monograph is the only of the three that does not directly cite Lefebvrian concepts; however, the author’s description of conflictual memory— expressed, as he effectively argues, through the physically built environment of the city—closely parallels Lefebvre’s understanding that social space is “a means of human reappropriation through the development of counter-spaces forged by artistic expression and social resistance.”27 24 Stuart Elden, Understanding Henri Lefebvre: Theory and the Possible (Continuum Studies in Philosophy, London; New York: Continuum, 2004). 25 Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,105. 26 Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space, tr. Donald Nicholson-Smith (Oxford, England, and Cambridge, Mass.:Basil Blackwell, 1991). Qtd. in Hayden, The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History, 19. 27 Chris Butler. Henri Lefebvre: Spatial Politics, Everyday Life and the Right to the City.Nomikoi. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2012.
  • 13. Reinhardt 12 The ubiquity of Lefebvrian concepts, terminology, and understandings across all three books demonstrates the pervasiveness of his work through the interactivity of urbanism and memory; holistically, the dialectic of place is dominated by the considerations of how societies imbue space with meaning. A second consideration in synthesis of these sources is their consideration of specifically and purposefully mnemonically-charged urban environments—in short, monuments and other vehicles of physical memorialization. Here the most obvious illustrations are evident in Rosenfeld’s work, as his monograph largely focuses on the mnemonic implications of the built environment of Munich. Specifically, Rosenfeld thoroughly documents the sociocultural relevance and implications of monuments through his extensive inventory and analysis of postwar monuments; his presentation of the subject of monuments is a meaningful one, as it establishes both the normative expectations of memorialization and examples of its failure. While defining monuments as “designed exclusively to serve memory,” and recognizing that “it is less what monuments represent than the reasons why they are erected that sheds light upon the construction of local memory,” he also rightly notes that many monuments are ineffective because they are hidden away, badly sited, or include ambiguous texts, and thus do not serve the purpose of creating or shaping critical collective memory.28 By conflating this inefficacy with Munich’s “inability to mourn,” Rosenfeld implicitly establishes monuments as being a direct representation of social space and collective memory. Harmanşah continues in a similar vein by describing the social narratives espoused by commemorative monuments concomitant with the urban construction projects of Iron Age Syro-Mesopotamian cities. Drawing again from Lefebvrian thought, Harmanşah claims the sociocultural importance of monuments is 28 Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,107-147.
  • 14. Reinhardt 13 exemplified in their displaying of ideologically charged narratives of the state into sites of public gathering and ritual practice, and that monuments actively represent the dialectic of space production through their dynamic reorientation of culture and rituality along public dimensions.29 Hayden’s commentary on the interactivity of the built environment and social memory through the vehicle of monuments is less explicit, but holistically represents a broad synthesis of Rosenfeld’s and Harmanşah’s understandings of monuments. Hayden’s Power of Place project— as discussed earlier—aimed to restructure the paradigmatic understandings of Los Angeles’ public history and collective memory through the pluralistic ‘revealing’ of marginalized histories. The organization’s call to action (and, consequently, Hayden’s) was to allow communities to collectively define their past, present and future through the reinterpretation of built environments; the memorialization of Biddy Mason’s homestead and the shaping of collective memory in “Little Tokyo” both represent such attempts at sociocultural ‘revisionism’.30 Mnemonic physical environments, accordingly, represent a union of Rosenfeld’s normativity—with regards to what monuments should intrinsically represent—and Harmanşah’s expression of power in space. The holistic understanding of monuments as social vehicles is thus necessary to the exploration of cities and memory, as it represents both a bidirectional link between the two and the normative implications of socially constructed space. If Lefebvrian thought and a discourse on the meaning of monuments are defining elements in the relationship of urban environments and memory—which, as this essay has argued, they are—then what, in turn, defines these overarching themes? The answer lies in understanding the theoretical underpinnings of both subjects; at the root of both physical memorialization and the broad school of Lefebvrian thought is the dialectic contestation of 29 Harmanşah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East, 152. 30 Hayden, The Power of Place,82-240
  • 15. Reinhardt 14 memory. The former—physical memorialization—is best summarized by Pierre Nora’s conceptualizations of lieux de mémoire, which holds that the memorialization of history in physicality represents “a turning point where consciousness of a break with the past is bound up with the sense that memory has been torn—but torn in such a way as to pose the problem of the embodiment of memory in certain sites where a sense of historical continuity persists.”31 Central to history, according to Nora, is “a critical discourse that is antithetical to spontaneous memory,” which establishes lieux de mémoire as phenomenal and abstract, and necessarily subject to teleological subjectivity.32 Lefebvre’s understandings similarly reflect the dialectic contestation of memory, as the social production of space is defined through both the reproduction of society through social action and the “unequal, unbalanced distribution of agencies at work in the making of urban space.”33 Lefebvre, in the same vein as Nora, also conceptualizes mnemonic environments and artifacts as being “concrete abstractions”: paradoxical representations of the interface of history and memory.34 Through understanding the mechanics of Lefebvrian social space and physical mnemonics, the theoretical interactivity of cities and socially constructed space becomes evident in the conflictual nature and continued discourse of memory. The elements of the dialectic contestation of memory are expressed in many ways, but nonetheless are present in nearly all considerations of the construction of space and memory. For Rosenfeld, this is the constant contention between traditionalist and modernist forces in the shaping of Munich’s built and socially constructed urban environment. The fragmented conceptualization of local memory—predominantly favoring traditionalism, but nonetheless far from monolithic—shapes the discourse throughout Rosenfeld’s study; in all three timeframes, he 31 Pierre Nora,"Between Memory and History: Les Lieux De Mémoire," Representations 26 (1989): 7-24. 32 Ibid., 7. 33 Łukasz, Henri Lefebvre on Space Architecture,Urban Research,and the Production of Theory,133-35. 34 Ibid., 136.
  • 16. Reinhardt 15 characterizes Munich’s architectural legacy and cultural identity as being defined by “the constancy of mnemonic competition.”35 In the context of Hayden’s work—both her LA project and The Power of Place—the contestation of memory is the defining element in the theoretical and philosophical platform from which her objectives stem. In bringing together planners, artist, historians, geographers, activists, and members of the community to collectively ‘reveal’ LA’s communal memory by realigning development of the built environment towards considerations of Lefebvrian space, Hayden intrinsically (and explicitly) establishes her work as a counter- memory to traditionalist Anglo-American history that dominates historic architectural preservationism, and thus the mnemonic vernacular of the city.36 Even in ancient Syro- Mesopotamian societies, as Harmanşah argues, the architectural legacy and social history is shaped by the interaction of political discourse and collective social activity.37 The construction of space in ancient urban centers, shaped largely by the interface of imperial cosmopolitanism and vernacular social practices of Iron Age society, conveyed conflictual implications of short- term political motivations and long-term considerations of settlement trends and societal processes. Considering all three monographs in tandem, the key mechanic of social memorialization, and of the mnemonic imbuement of meaning in the built environment of cities, is revealed to be the necessarily conflictual nature of memory. This foundational method of mnemonic construction, though potent in its own right, is more meaningful in its ubiquity and 35 Rosenfeld, Munich and Memory,8. This competition is present throughout his discussion, with small idiosyncratic variances between timeframes. In the immediate post-war era,it is conflicting impulses towards restoration and renewal that represents this conflict; in the modernist period, it is the conflict between populist historic preservation movements and actors of revisionist reconstruction; and in the postmodernist period, it is the recontestation of the modernist memory of the Third Reich that stigmatized architectural tradition. 36 Hayden, The Power of Place,245. 37 Harmansah, Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East,102-153.
  • 17. Reinhardt 16 fundamentality across multiple subjects, disciplines, and conceptualizations. The context of this discussion has been of multidisciplinary and dialectic exploration into the implications of global urbanism; the importance of this topic, accordingly, is expressed through several independent fields of research, and its relevance is implicated in the consideration of these fields as interconnected and meaningfully complex subjects. In a world that is increasingly and objectively defined by urbanism—both socioculturally and demographically—the historiographic understandings of memory bear a significant weight in pursuit of understanding not only the contemporaneous contexts of the past and present, but also in the exploration of what it means to be a communally-defined species. Memory, in other words, is an important window into the one universal constant in civilization as we know it: the condition of being human.
  • 18. Reinhardt 17 Bibliography Butler, Chris. Henri Lefebvre: Spatial Politics, Everyday Life and the Right to the City. Nomikoi. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis, 2012. Elden, Stuart. Understanding Henri Lefebvre: Theory and the Possible. Continuum Studies in Philosophy. London; New York: Continuum, 2004. Harmanşah, Ömür. Cities and the Shaping of Memory in the Ancient Near East. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Hayden, Dolores. The Power of Place: Urban Landscapes as Public History. Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995. Nora, Pierre. "Between Memory and History: Les Lieux De Mémoire." Representations, no. 26 (1989): 7-24. Norton, Robert Edward. Secret Germany: Stefan George and His Circle. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2002. Rosenfeld, Gavriel David. Munich and Memory: Architecture, Monuments, and the Legacy of the Third Reich. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000. Stanek, Łukasz. Henri Lefebvre on Space Architecture, Urban Research, and the Production of Theory. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2011. Zhang, Xing Quan. "The Trends, Promises and Challenges of Urbanisation in the World." Habitat International 54 (2016): 241-52.