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Remembering experience: Public memorials are not just about the dead anymore
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Remembering experience: Public memorials are not just about the dead anymore

Alison Atkinson-Phillips
Memory studies, Vol.15(5), pp.947-962
2022

Abstract

Arts & Humanities Cultural Studies History Social Sciences memorials commemoration public art Art history, theory and criticism Critical heritage, museum and archive studies Cultural studies
This article considers a shift in public memorialization towards the remembrance of experience, rather than death. Drawing on research into Australian public memorials to lived experiences of loss and trauma from 1985 to 2015, I compare the trends identified in that research with similar memorial projects internationally. I have found that the emergence of memorials to lived experience is an expression, and an expansion, of the kinds of knowledge that can be remembered publicly, and is influenced by discourses of trauma, human rights and transitional justice.

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#16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

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Citation topics
10 Arts & Humanities
10.245 20th Century History
10.245.1462 Collective Memory
Web Of Science research areas
Cultural Studies
History
ESI research areas
Social Sciences, general
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