Within the collective memory literature, very few scholars have sought to examine commemoration through the lens of globalization theory even though it poses challenges to understandings of time and space that underpin memory studies. This article examines the local political conditions and global institutional environment influencing memory discourses. Drawing on the case of Bloody Sunday (1972), I examine the role of memory choreographers in constructing universalizing commemorative idioms and the local conditions and global setting influencing this memory work. I argue that the mid-1990s was characterised by an increasing emphasis on Bloody Sundayâs globally âchicâ qualities that seemed to liquidate its earlier localized meaning and that...
This volume explores the relationship between political change and collective memory about traumatic...
This book bridges theoretical gaps that exist between the meta-concepts of memory, place and identit...
This article explores the relationship between international history and memory studies. It argues t...
Within the collective memory literature, very few scholars have sought to examine commemoration thro...
Bloody Sunday, Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
Bloody Sunday. Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
This article contributes to debates about the theoretical coherence and historical utility of the co...
In the age of globalization, local memories of past violence are often dislocated from their materia...
IN recent years, scholars from different disciplinary backgrounds such as anthropology, sociology, p...
The sociological literature on collective memory puts forward fragmented and multivocal commemorati...
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
We examine here recent arguments that embodied experience is an important site of collective memory,...
An understanding of the Wars on Terror within their historical context, and alongside their historic...
“How White was the Wash?: Bloody Sunday, 1972, and Memory Creation in the Widgery Report” focuses on...
Life-stories produced by practices of popular and grass-roots memory-work have flourished in Norther...
This volume explores the relationship between political change and collective memory about traumatic...
This book bridges theoretical gaps that exist between the meta-concepts of memory, place and identit...
This article explores the relationship between international history and memory studies. It argues t...
Within the collective memory literature, very few scholars have sought to examine commemoration thro...
Bloody Sunday, Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
Bloody Sunday. Derry, Northern Ireland, January 30, 1972, in which 13 Catholic civilians were shot d...
This article contributes to debates about the theoretical coherence and historical utility of the co...
In the age of globalization, local memories of past violence are often dislocated from their materia...
IN recent years, scholars from different disciplinary backgrounds such as anthropology, sociology, p...
The sociological literature on collective memory puts forward fragmented and multivocal commemorati...
The first two decades of the twenty-first century have witnessed a significant shift in the ways tha...
We examine here recent arguments that embodied experience is an important site of collective memory,...
An understanding of the Wars on Terror within their historical context, and alongside their historic...
“How White was the Wash?: Bloody Sunday, 1972, and Memory Creation in the Widgery Report” focuses on...
Life-stories produced by practices of popular and grass-roots memory-work have flourished in Norther...
This volume explores the relationship between political change and collective memory about traumatic...
This book bridges theoretical gaps that exist between the meta-concepts of memory, place and identit...
This article explores the relationship between international history and memory studies. It argues t...