Abstract:This article explores Nina Berman's pictorial monograph Homeland (2008), as a rearticulation of the domestic landscape of the United States following 9/11. The book works to excavate and shape the function of cultural memory by examining how parts of the country responded to the events of 9/11. Considering how the photo-text captures what I call a queer topographics of US culture, I suggest that the spaces of the everyday (church, school, and leisure) are mediated by Berman's framing and use of "narrative" ess… Show more
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