RT Article T1 Memory landscapes and stories of shame: the coexistence of Greece, Cyprus and Turkey as an affective “Mission Impossible” JF Interdisciplinary applications of shame/violence theory SP 223 OP 241 A1 Karaiskou, Vicky LA English YR 2022 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1830903799 AB The chapter focuses on Greece, Cyprus and Turkey and discusses how affective narratives in public space create “memory landscapes” that determine perceptions of historical past and regulate attitudes in the present time. Since the nineteenth century, reiterations of visual and verbal narratives on loss in public discourse among the three countries function as a “trauma-drama”. They nourish victimisation, ensure accumulation of anger, fear and sadness for the injustice done, as well as kindle vicious circles of duty (and shame) with regard to the perished. We use two events as case studies to explore how “figures of memory” and their deriving visuality produce powerful affective narratives and “regimes of truth” that activate the collective psyche triggering multilevel reactions in the social and political sphere. The first event is the staging of two ancient dramas at the ancient theatre of Salamis in Cyprus, in 2015 and 2016. The second is the change of status of Hagia Sophia, the Byzantine cathedral in Istanbul, from a museum to a fully fledged mosque, in 2020. The chapter proposes that awareness of the power visuality exercises and critical revising of the master narratives can shift attention into the building of a future based on mutual understanding. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 236-241 SN 9783031055690 K1 affective narratives K1 Cyprus K1 Greece K1 Identities K1 Turkey K1 Visuality DO 10.1007/978-3-031-05570-6_12