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Memory and Memorials is based on papers given at a conference on 'Remembering and Forgetting' held at Stirling University in 2000. It explores issues of memory relating to twentieth century wars from a variety of perspectives and disciplines, analysing the degree to which a collective memory can be created or shaped.
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Memory and Memorials is based on papers given at a conference on 'Remembering and Forgetting' held at Stirling University in 2000. It explores issues of memory relating to twentieth century wars from a variety of perspectives and disciplines, analysing the degree to which a collective memory can be created or shaped.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. August 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 157mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 592g
- ISBN-13: 9780754607359
- ISBN-10: 0754607356
- Artikelnr.: 35655616
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. August 2004
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 241mm x 157mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 592g
- ISBN-13: 9780754607359
- ISBN-10: 0754607356
- Artikelnr.: 35655616
William Kidd, Brian Murdoch
Contents: Introduction, William Kidd and Brian Murdoch; Part 1 Memorials
and remembrance, 1915-30: Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais: commemorating a
French national ideal in London, Axel Lapp; Making the Great War
great:1914-18 war memorials in Wallonia, Laurence van Ypersèle; Belonging
to a 'grandiose' family: visual memory and representations of the chain of
solidarity between the generations in French First World War culture,
Marie-Monique Huss; The Scottish National War Memorial, Angus Calder;
Ordeal and re-affirmation: masculinity and the construction of Scottish and
English national identity in Great War memorial sculpture 1919-30, J.A.
Black; Memory and prophecy among the war-graves: Hans Chlumberg's drama,
Miracle at Verdun, Brian Murdoch. Part 2 Remembering and forgetting, from
the Second World war to the present: 'To the lads who came back': memorial
windows and Rolls of Honour in Scotland, William Kidd; War, family,
commemoration: a path to history, J.-S. Sériot; Remembering and
embroidering in Jean Rouaud's family cycle, Geoff Woollen; Communal myth
and silenced memories: the unremembered experience of Italians in Scotland
during the Second World War, Wendy Ugolini; Liberating France without the
French: grammars of representation, Hilary Footitt; The victims of the
purges in Liberation France: between memory, oblivion and catharsis,
François Rouquet. Part 3 Collective memory in question: challenge and
reconstruction?: Memory, distortion and the war in German popular culture:
the case of Konsalik, Maggie Sargeant; The problematic commemoration of war
in the early films of Alan Resnais, Alastair Duncan; Pierre Drieu la
Rochelle, Louis Malle and the ambiguous memory of French fascism, Hugo
Frey; Occupation Memories: French history and the Aubrac Affair in the
1990s, Hanna Diamond and Claire Gorrara; Transmission of memory in the
classroom: France and the Algerian war in the 1990s, Jo McCormack; From
'hereditary enmity' to Franco-German entente: shared m
and remembrance, 1915-30: Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais: commemorating a
French national ideal in London, Axel Lapp; Making the Great War
great:1914-18 war memorials in Wallonia, Laurence van Ypersèle; Belonging
to a 'grandiose' family: visual memory and representations of the chain of
solidarity between the generations in French First World War culture,
Marie-Monique Huss; The Scottish National War Memorial, Angus Calder;
Ordeal and re-affirmation: masculinity and the construction of Scottish and
English national identity in Great War memorial sculpture 1919-30, J.A.
Black; Memory and prophecy among the war-graves: Hans Chlumberg's drama,
Miracle at Verdun, Brian Murdoch. Part 2 Remembering and forgetting, from
the Second World war to the present: 'To the lads who came back': memorial
windows and Rolls of Honour in Scotland, William Kidd; War, family,
commemoration: a path to history, J.-S. Sériot; Remembering and
embroidering in Jean Rouaud's family cycle, Geoff Woollen; Communal myth
and silenced memories: the unremembered experience of Italians in Scotland
during the Second World War, Wendy Ugolini; Liberating France without the
French: grammars of representation, Hilary Footitt; The victims of the
purges in Liberation France: between memory, oblivion and catharsis,
François Rouquet. Part 3 Collective memory in question: challenge and
reconstruction?: Memory, distortion and the war in German popular culture:
the case of Konsalik, Maggie Sargeant; The problematic commemoration of war
in the early films of Alan Resnais, Alastair Duncan; Pierre Drieu la
Rochelle, Louis Malle and the ambiguous memory of French fascism, Hugo
Frey; Occupation Memories: French history and the Aubrac Affair in the
1990s, Hanna Diamond and Claire Gorrara; Transmission of memory in the
classroom: France and the Algerian war in the 1990s, Jo McCormack; From
'hereditary enmity' to Franco-German entente: shared m
Contents: Introduction, William Kidd and Brian Murdoch; Part 1 Memorials
and remembrance, 1915-30: Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais: commemorating a
French national ideal in London, Axel Lapp; Making the Great War
great:1914-18 war memorials in Wallonia, Laurence van Ypersèle; Belonging
to a 'grandiose' family: visual memory and representations of the chain of
solidarity between the generations in French First World War culture,
Marie-Monique Huss; The Scottish National War Memorial, Angus Calder;
Ordeal and re-affirmation: masculinity and the construction of Scottish and
English national identity in Great War memorial sculpture 1919-30, J.A.
Black; Memory and prophecy among the war-graves: Hans Chlumberg's drama,
Miracle at Verdun, Brian Murdoch. Part 2 Remembering and forgetting, from
the Second World war to the present: 'To the lads who came back': memorial
windows and Rolls of Honour in Scotland, William Kidd; War, family,
commemoration: a path to history, J.-S. Sériot; Remembering and
embroidering in Jean Rouaud's family cycle, Geoff Woollen; Communal myth
and silenced memories: the unremembered experience of Italians in Scotland
during the Second World War, Wendy Ugolini; Liberating France without the
French: grammars of representation, Hilary Footitt; The victims of the
purges in Liberation France: between memory, oblivion and catharsis,
François Rouquet. Part 3 Collective memory in question: challenge and
reconstruction?: Memory, distortion and the war in German popular culture:
the case of Konsalik, Maggie Sargeant; The problematic commemoration of war
in the early films of Alan Resnais, Alastair Duncan; Pierre Drieu la
Rochelle, Louis Malle and the ambiguous memory of French fascism, Hugo
Frey; Occupation Memories: French history and the Aubrac Affair in the
1990s, Hanna Diamond and Claire Gorrara; Transmission of memory in the
classroom: France and the Algerian war in the 1990s, Jo McCormack; From
'hereditary enmity' to Franco-German entente: shared m
and remembrance, 1915-30: Rodin's Bourgeois de Calais: commemorating a
French national ideal in London, Axel Lapp; Making the Great War
great:1914-18 war memorials in Wallonia, Laurence van Ypersèle; Belonging
to a 'grandiose' family: visual memory and representations of the chain of
solidarity between the generations in French First World War culture,
Marie-Monique Huss; The Scottish National War Memorial, Angus Calder;
Ordeal and re-affirmation: masculinity and the construction of Scottish and
English national identity in Great War memorial sculpture 1919-30, J.A.
Black; Memory and prophecy among the war-graves: Hans Chlumberg's drama,
Miracle at Verdun, Brian Murdoch. Part 2 Remembering and forgetting, from
the Second World war to the present: 'To the lads who came back': memorial
windows and Rolls of Honour in Scotland, William Kidd; War, family,
commemoration: a path to history, J.-S. Sériot; Remembering and
embroidering in Jean Rouaud's family cycle, Geoff Woollen; Communal myth
and silenced memories: the unremembered experience of Italians in Scotland
during the Second World War, Wendy Ugolini; Liberating France without the
French: grammars of representation, Hilary Footitt; The victims of the
purges in Liberation France: between memory, oblivion and catharsis,
François Rouquet. Part 3 Collective memory in question: challenge and
reconstruction?: Memory, distortion and the war in German popular culture:
the case of Konsalik, Maggie Sargeant; The problematic commemoration of war
in the early films of Alan Resnais, Alastair Duncan; Pierre Drieu la
Rochelle, Louis Malle and the ambiguous memory of French fascism, Hugo
Frey; Occupation Memories: French history and the Aubrac Affair in the
1990s, Hanna Diamond and Claire Gorrara; Transmission of memory in the
classroom: France and the Algerian war in the 1990s, Jo McCormack; From
'hereditary enmity' to Franco-German entente: shared m