The Routledge Handbook of Reenactment Studies: Key Terms in the Field
Edited by Vanessa Agnew, Jonathan Lamb, Juliane Tomann
The Routledge Handbook of Reenactment Studies provides the first overview of significant concepts within reenactment studies. The volume includes a co-authored critical introduction and a comprehensive compilation of key term entries contributed by leading reenactment scholars from Europe, North America, and Australia. Well into the future, this wide-ranging reference work will inform and shape the thinking of researchers, teachers, and students of history and heritage and memory studies, as well as cultural studies, film, theater and performance studies, dance, art history, museum studies, literary criticism, musicology, and anthropology.
Table of Contents
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
List of Key Terms
Introduction
Archive
Art
Authenticity
Battle
Body and Embodiment
Conjecture
Corroboration
Dark Tourism
Documentary
Emotion
Evidence
Experience
Experimental Archeology
Expertise and Amateurism
Forensic Architecture
Gaming
Gender
Gesture
Hajj
Heritage
Historically Informed Performance
History of the Field
Indigeneity
Living History
Martyrdom
Material Culture
Mediality
Memory and Commemoration
Mimesis
Mitzvah and Memorialization
Narrative
Nostalgia
Objects
Pageant
Performance and Performativity
Pilgrimage
Play
Practices of Authenticity
Practices of Reenactment
Production of Historical Meaning
Realism
Representation
Ritual
Role-Play
Suffering
Trauma
Bibliography
Index
Editor(s)
Biography
Vanessa Agnew is a Professor in the English Department at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany, and a Senior Fellow in the Humanities Research Centre at the Australian National University, Australia.
Jonathan Lamb is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities at Vanderbilt University, United States.
Juliane Tomann is Head of the Imre Kertesz Kolleg’s research area History in the Public Sphere at Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany.