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Article
“Assurance that the world holds far more good than bad”:The Pedagogy of Memory at the Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum
Rhetoric Review (2019)
  • Lauren Obermark, University of Missouri–St. Louis
Abstract
The Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum (OKCNMM) must balance respectful remembrance with broad education about the 1995 terrorist attack that killed one hundred and sixty-eight people. Epideictic and material rhetorics prevail throughout the OKCNMM, communicating uplifting messages about the effects of the bombing while also prompting visitors to create their own complex, productively uncomfortable pathways toward understanding. In this process, civic engagement through rhetorical processes is encouraged; the museum models and creates space to practice reflective dwelling, critical thinking, discussion, and composition, offering a rhetorical education that can circulate far beyond this single site.
Publication Date
February 6, 2019
DOI
10.1080/07350198.2019.1549410
Citation Information
Lauren Obermark. "“Assurance that the world holds far more good than bad”:The Pedagogy of Memory at the Oklahoma City National Memorial Museum" Rhetoric Review Vol. 38 Iss. 1 (2019) p. 93 - 107
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/lauren-obermark/11/