How do nations choose which events to memorialize? In a study of the collective mnemonics of the United States\u27 wars in Vietnam and Korea, I argue that the latter has been disproportionately discounted given its long-lasting and timely impacts. Using concepts such as semiotics, dominant voices , and habitus, I argue that the intense memorialization of the Vietnam War has been sustained through resources not put towards the Korean War. I argue that sentimentality guides us to continue strengthening Vietnam War mnemonic devices and, in turn, leads us to further indoctrinate Vietnam as an unforgettable war while further relegating the Korean War to the status of forgotten
Forty years after the Vietnam War ended, the challenges of remembering and retelling the war continu...
This dissertation is about war and memory and bodies and things and the connections between them; it...
This thesis is an attempt to articulate the meanings of collective memory as well as investigate its...
The Vietnam War is remembered in a variety of ways. It is remembered as a war against communism, yet...
Part of a wider project on how the Vietnam War (1945-1975) is remembered by three key collectives, V...
Due to a stunning defeat in Vietnam, the years following the conflict were full of denial, shame, an...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
The Korean War, as a “hot war” within the Cold War period with participation by 21 member nations of...
When we Americans think back into the history of our country, we often see a glossed-over and inaccu...
As the world approaches the 100th anniversary of the “War to End All Wars,” the mind can’t help but ...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
This study attempts to show how Americans in general remembered the Vietnam War from 1975 to 1985, t...
Yes, it’s about Korea and that war, brief as it was, was briefer still for the 57,000 casualties. In...
IPSHU Research Report Series No.33 : The First International symposium 2017 hosted by Institute for ...
The year 2019 marked the 40th anniversary of the outbreak of the Sino-Vietnamese War in 1979. Making...
Forty years after the Vietnam War ended, the challenges of remembering and retelling the war continu...
This dissertation is about war and memory and bodies and things and the connections between them; it...
This thesis is an attempt to articulate the meanings of collective memory as well as investigate its...
The Vietnam War is remembered in a variety of ways. It is remembered as a war against communism, yet...
Part of a wider project on how the Vietnam War (1945-1975) is remembered by three key collectives, V...
Due to a stunning defeat in Vietnam, the years following the conflict were full of denial, shame, an...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
The Korean War, as a “hot war” within the Cold War period with participation by 21 member nations of...
When we Americans think back into the history of our country, we often see a glossed-over and inaccu...
As the world approaches the 100th anniversary of the “War to End All Wars,” the mind can’t help but ...
The admission, supported by a careful reading of the historical record, begs larger questions: How d...
This study attempts to show how Americans in general remembered the Vietnam War from 1975 to 1985, t...
Yes, it’s about Korea and that war, brief as it was, was briefer still for the 57,000 casualties. In...
IPSHU Research Report Series No.33 : The First International symposium 2017 hosted by Institute for ...
The year 2019 marked the 40th anniversary of the outbreak of the Sino-Vietnamese War in 1979. Making...
Forty years after the Vietnam War ended, the challenges of remembering and retelling the war continu...
This dissertation is about war and memory and bodies and things and the connections between them; it...
This thesis is an attempt to articulate the meanings of collective memory as well as investigate its...