The Memorialization of September 11: Dominant and Local Discourses on the Rebuilding of the World Trade Center Site
Author(s)
Low, Setha M.
Abstract
An inherent tension exists between the meanings of the World Trade Center site created by dominant political, and economic players and the significance of the space for those who actually live near it. Most of the writing on and analysis of the site have focused on the construction of a memorial, space for an imagined national and global, community of visitors who identify with its broader, state-produced meanings. But New Yorkers, in general, and downtown residents, in particular, bring to meaning making their own personal, involvement in and knowledge of a located history that has social, political, and economic significance for their everyday Lives. These meanings are as much a part of memorialization as the dominant players’ political. machinations and economic competition for space and status. Uncovering and eliciting these local memorial discourses is part of an ethnographic project that focuses on how personalized narratives of loss emerge and are manipulated within mass-mediated representations of the World Trade Center space. My contribution to understanding how the memorial process works has been to analyze what downtown residents say about their experience of September 11 and its aftermath, to record their feelings about a memorial, and, in so doing, to contest, expand, and modify the dominant media and governmental, representations of September 11 and its memorialization.