Remediation and remembrance: “Dancing Auschwitz” Collective Memory and New Media

Journal Title: ESSACHESS - Journal for Communication Studies - Year 2012, Vol 5, Issue 2

Abstract

A new generation is changing the face of Holocaust remembrance, a morally laden subject that continues to captivate public imagination, spark controversy and generate dialogue, now by using social media. In summer 2010, controversy erupted worldwide as “Dancing Auschwitz,” a YouTube video of a Jewish family dancing at various Holocaust remembrance sites, defied the existing cultural narrative through a novel expression of Holocaust remembrance. The artifact exemplifies the larger debate whether technology aids memory as successfully as we believe or whether by freeing us from the burden encourages us to forget. We argue that virtual memorials can fulfill roles left vacant by more traditional forms of remembrance and open new avenues of communication and expression that allow participants, especially Germans and Jews, to re-mediate their identities. Virtual memorials can enhance the remembrance experience by cultivating fluid, interactive and creative spaces that encourage high degrees of participation, collaboration and self-expression. In the case study, YouTube users implemented three forms of remediation: role switching, redefinition, and disassociation. Despite the obstacles (e.g., destructive identity forces, commercial culture, and temporalities of social media trends), technology ultimately act as an aid to humanity’s deep-seated desire to remember.

Authors and Affiliations

Paige L. GIBSON| Department of Communication, University of Illinois, Chicago, USA, Steve JONES| Professor, Department of Communication, University of Illinois, Chicago, USA

Keywords

Related Articles

Introduction to Micro-finance

Micro-finance appears today as the most promising tool in the struggle against poverty and banking exclusion. By providing micro-credit, collecting saving and supplying microinsurance, micro finance institutions (MF...

The fracking debate in the media: The role of citizen platforms as sources of information

This article focusses on the analysis of the news coverage of fracking in the seven daily national Spanish newspapers in 2012. The results of the analysis of the 246 news items, based on the theory of framing, have dem...

The symbolic process of the tourist attractiveness of a city through the notion of empowerment: an asset of the community tourism

This research note analyzes the interpretative permanent process of the symbolism through the spaces in community-based tourism and local development. The goal of this tourism processes is to empower the local communit...

DMA Friends: the mobilization of statistics in a media innovation experiment in the museum sector

On January 23, 2013, the Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) returned to free general admission. This announcement coincided with the official launching of two programs: DMA Friends, a loyalty program, and DMA Partners, a membe...

Evaluating the quality of training courses: a comparison of different designs for evaluating training

This paper aims to show that some designs for evaluating training are more suitable than others in a quality approach. Effectively, several practices of evaluation are incompatible. These are presented in the first...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP9112
  • DOI -
  • Views 423
  • Downloads 27

How To Cite

Paige L. GIBSON, Steve JONES (2012). Remediation and remembrance: “Dancing Auschwitz” Collective Memory and New Media. ESSACHESS - Journal for Communication Studies, 5(2), 107-131. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-9112