Performing Social Forgetting in a Post-Conflict Landscape: The Case of Cyprus
Working in both the Greek/Southern and the Turkish/Northern parts of Cyprus, Rabia Hamansah conducted ethnographic research on six Orthodox Christian and Muslim religious sites for two years, in order to investigate how formerly shared religious landscape contributed to the ways in which collective remembering and forgetting is practiced by Greek and Turkish Cypriots, and how religious and cultural heritage was destroyed, manipulated, accommodated, and reimagined during periods of conflict.