Nation-states are not the only bodies to have invested in memory-building through the construction of war memorials. This article moves the analysis on from nation-states to firms. It undertakes an analysis of war memorials built by the Bank of England. At the close of World War I, the Bank of England was not yet a nationalized company. Yet, it still, like many other organizations, engaged in this process of memorialization. We show that businesses closely followed the habits of nation-states when it came to commemorating war. The building of monuments and the ceremonies, which took place around them assigned values to the imagined communities, groups and nations. These events continue to the present day
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
This article examines two major rituals of contemporary national life in the UK: association footbal...
Although it is generally considered that there was relatively little interest in the First World War...
Nation-states are not the only bodies to have invested in memory-building through the construction o...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organizations in maintaining a memory of ...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organisations in maintaining a memory of ...
This thesis examines the development war memorialisation from 1860 until 2014 in the UK, France and ...
This special issue of Management and Organizational History is prompted by a public celebration. It ...
This paper uses the distinction that has been developed within organizational studies between collec...
The First World War is often held to be a watershed in the memorialisation of war in Britain. Throug...
This article examines how a post-1918 Edwardian commemorative aesthetic focused on the “English Gard...
This article inspects the ways that spaces of war memorialization are organized and reorganized thro...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
After the First World War the British state tried to show the families of the dead their thanks, and...
This thesis project argues that memorials constructed after 9/11 were designed specifically in a way...
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
This article examines two major rituals of contemporary national life in the UK: association footbal...
Although it is generally considered that there was relatively little interest in the First World War...
Nation-states are not the only bodies to have invested in memory-building through the construction o...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organizations in maintaining a memory of ...
This paper explores the role of corporations and financial organisations in maintaining a memory of ...
This thesis examines the development war memorialisation from 1860 until 2014 in the UK, France and ...
This special issue of Management and Organizational History is prompted by a public celebration. It ...
This paper uses the distinction that has been developed within organizational studies between collec...
The First World War is often held to be a watershed in the memorialisation of war in Britain. Throug...
This article examines how a post-1918 Edwardian commemorative aesthetic focused on the “English Gard...
This article inspects the ways that spaces of war memorialization are organized and reorganized thro...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
After the First World War the British state tried to show the families of the dead their thanks, and...
This thesis project argues that memorials constructed after 9/11 were designed specifically in a way...
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
This article examines two major rituals of contemporary national life in the UK: association footbal...
Although it is generally considered that there was relatively little interest in the First World War...