Containing marginal memories: the melancholy landscapes of Hart Island (New York), Cockatoo Island (Sydney), and Ripapa Island (Christchurch)
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Date
2011
Type
Journal Article
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Abstract
Contained within tight geographical margins, islands are places where memories
are intensified and heightened. The antithesis of the dreamy palm-covered
paradises of travel brochures are the urban islands that lurk in blind spots, dark
and brooding. Spatially and socially marginalised, such islands become memorials
to the shadowy dimensions of civilisation: prisons, landfills, military bases, lunatic
asylums, and cemeteries. Hart Island, Cockatoo Island, and Ripapa Island are
liminal zones at the edges of our consciousness. There are no permanent residents
on them, yet they are replete with cultural memories. Hart Island, despite being the
United States’ largest cemetery, is practically invisible. Out of bounds to the public,
it is a cemetery for the nameless and the homeless, with graves dug by prisoners
from Riker’s Island jail. The island’s ruins include a lunatic asylum, prison,
amusement park, and Nike anti-missile base, all dissolving into the picturesque
greenery. Cockatoo Island is a wholly transformed landscape with silos, dry
docks, and buildings sculpted directly into the sandstone. The infrastructural
modifications have housed prisons, reform schools, and shipyards. Ripapa Island
is also highly modified, with its defensive opportunities realised in its long history
as a pa¯, a military fort, and a prison, which in the late nineteenth century housed
followers of Te Whiti from the passive protest at Parihaka. Bearing their weighty
cargo of memories, each island presents a conundrum, a “what now?” dilemma
that vexes those charged with their care: to be preserved in a reserve as at Ripapa,
or gentrified as a recreational site like Cockatoo, or to remain resolutely off the
map as with Hart Island?
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© 2013 The Memory Waka (Massey University).