In 1983, 38 years after the end of World War II, Britain gained its first public memorial dedicated solely to victims of the Holocaust: the Hyde Park Holocaust Memorial Garden. Organized by the Board of Deputies of British Jews, this campaign revealed the ways that memorialization of the Holocaust in Britain during the 1980s was cross cut with issues of identity, memory and history. In attempting to restore the «biography» of the memorial, this paper examines the way the memorial\u27s relationship with its potential locations is important in the making of meaning and shows how debates over the perceived appropriateness of the sites were structured by, and in turn structure, various discourses concerning Anglo-Jewish identity.<br...
This article traces how the Holocaust has been responded to at a political level in Britain from 194...
Final published versionAlso available from Creighton University via the link in this recordThis arti...
How do memorials act to transmit memory through the organization of space? In this paper we contrast...
The quantity of Holocaust memorials in Britain and their prominence in public debates beseeches the ...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...
Through an exploration of both past and present day reactions to the liberation of the Nazi concentr...
This thesis traces the development of Britain’s Holocaust consciousness since the 1970s in order to ...
The Holocaust is a pervasive presence in British culture and society. Within the educational system ...
2021 marks the twentieth anniversary of Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD) in Britain. In the two decades ...
This thesis argues that the non-Jewish victims of the Holocaust are regarded as the ‘other’ victims,...
This article explores the politics of Holocaust memorialization by examining the intersection of ed...
Despite having undergone similar experiences of warfare and facing similar anxieties about the futur...
Explores the meanings generated by and through the establishment of Beth Shalom, Great Britain\u27s ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Holocaust Studies on 5...
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
This article traces how the Holocaust has been responded to at a political level in Britain from 194...
Final published versionAlso available from Creighton University via the link in this recordThis arti...
How do memorials act to transmit memory through the organization of space? In this paper we contrast...
The quantity of Holocaust memorials in Britain and their prominence in public debates beseeches the ...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...
Through an exploration of both past and present day reactions to the liberation of the Nazi concentr...
This thesis traces the development of Britain’s Holocaust consciousness since the 1970s in order to ...
The Holocaust is a pervasive presence in British culture and society. Within the educational system ...
2021 marks the twentieth anniversary of Holocaust Memorial Day (HMD) in Britain. In the two decades ...
This thesis argues that the non-Jewish victims of the Holocaust are regarded as the ‘other’ victims,...
This article explores the politics of Holocaust memorialization by examining the intersection of ed...
Despite having undergone similar experiences of warfare and facing similar anxieties about the futur...
Explores the meanings generated by and through the establishment of Beth Shalom, Great Britain\u27s ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Holocaust Studies on 5...
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
This article traces how the Holocaust has been responded to at a political level in Britain from 194...
Final published versionAlso available from Creighton University via the link in this recordThis arti...
How do memorials act to transmit memory through the organization of space? In this paper we contrast...