War, Memory, and Culture Book Series
War, Memory, and Culture is a book series published by the University of Alabama Press since 2016. Devoted to scholarship that examines the construction of collective or cultural war memory, the series is international in scope and not limited to any particular conflict. Steven Trout of the University of Alabama serves as the series editor.

Experiencing War Memorials: Environment, Affect, and Public Memory, edited by Jennifer K. Ladino is an interdisciplinary collection that examines how public memorials shape emotional and ideological understandings of war, violence, and injustice. Through diverse case studies, the volume demonstrates how affect, environment, and innovative commemorative forms influence how societies remember discord and its enduring legacies.
Contributions by Roger C. Aden, Corbin Allardice, English Brooks, Rodrigo Del Río, Jamie L. Downing, Susan L. Eastman, Allison S. Finkelstein, Erik J. Freeman, Koji Fuse, Ryan Hediger, Chaney Hill, Svitlana Kot, Jennifer K. Ladino, Alina Mozolevska, James E. Mueller, Jessy Ohl, Olha Polishchuk, Sarah Senk, Lisa Silvestri, Marek Steedman and Ici Vanwesenbeeck
“This luminous collection compellingly shows how war memorials generate and circulate
public feelings—grief, pride, shame, outrage—across scales from the local to the planetary.
Through rich, interdisciplinary case studies, it rethinks commemoration as a site
of affective encounter and ethical reckoning in an age of ecological and political
crisis.”
—Stef Craps, coeditor of Memory Unbound: Tracing the Dynamics of Memory Studies

Echoes of Exile: A Family’s Odyssey through the Holocaust and Cold War by Daniela Spenser is a family memoir of resilience and survival. Daniela Spenser initially set out to tell the story of her mother, Ruth, but in the course of her research unearthed personal facts and stories that additionally illuminate the shared traumas and experiences of millions of Czech, Polish, and German Jews who died in the Holocaust, as well as the stories of those who survived and lived under Communism and the Cold War. Her resulting work is a fascinating hybrid that combines family letters and interviews with deeply researched political history spanning from the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the fall of the Berlin Wall.
“Spenser’s erudition as a writer and scholar shines through … [Echoes of Exile] is
a fascinating and highly readable account of the author’s family history during a
tumultuous period in world history. It is a story worth telling.”
— S. Jonathan Wiesen, coauthor of Nazi Germany: Society, Culture, and Politics

— Matthew L. Downs, co-editor of The American South and the Great War, 1914-1924

“Portraits of Remembrance is a welcome addition to scholarship on commemoration and memory of the First World War.”
—Pearl James, author of The New Death: American Modernism and World War I

“War and Public Memory is a gripping story of Europe’s most divisive conflicts. In lucid prose, Messenger traces how loss has been carved into the European landscape. This vital study demonstrates that past atrocities continue to shape national identity, while memorials transform war into productive mechanisms of memory.”
—Sara J. Brenneis, author of Spaniards in Mauthausen: Representations of a Nazi Concentration Camp, 1940–2015

“Triumph of the Dead provides much needed information on post–WWII American military cemeteries in Europe, as well as the US agenda in postwar Europe in general.”
—Erika Doss, author of Memorial Mania: Public Feeling in America

—Philip D. Beidler, author of Beautiful War: Studies in a Dreadful Fascination and The Victory Album: Reflections on the Good Life after the Good War

—The Contemporary Pacific