This is the author's manuscript of an article published in Archaeological Dialogues.Exploring the relocation and reuse of fragments and whole artefacts, materials and monuments in contemporary commemorative memorials in the United Kingdom (UK), this paper focuses on the National Memorial Arboretum (Alrewas, Staffordshire, hereafter NMA). Within this unique assemblage of memorial gardens, reuse constitutes a distinctive range of material commemoration. Through a detailed investigation of the NMA’s gardens, this paper shows how monument and material reuse, while used in very different memorial forms, tends to be reserved to commemorate specific historical subjects and themes. Monument and material reuse is identified as a form of commemorativ...
After examining the substantial efforts at land reclamation and environmental mitigation accompanyin...
All wars, large and small scale, have had impacts on the built environments enmeshed in the conflict...
This article examines how a post-1918 Edwardian commemorative aesthetic focused on the “English Gard...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal ...
In exploring the mnemonic role of gardens, this paper will first focus on the value of gardens as bo...
In commemorations of human lives lost in terrorism, European and American memorials increasingly app...
Preservation of historical remains is ridden with complexity. In particular, battle landscapes are m...
This article inspects the ways that spaces of war memorialization are organized and reorganized thro...
A comparative analysis of samples of external memorials from burial grounds in Britain, Ireland and ...
"Instead of Tombstones - a Tree, a Garden, a Grove": Early Israeli Forests as Environmental Memorial...
This thesis examines the development war memorialisation from 1860 until 2014 in the UK, France and ...
This article explores practices of memorialisation in post-conflict society, through the case study ...
All wars, large and small scale, have had impacts on the built environments enmeshed in the conflict...
Where once geographers could argue that the ideological issues surrounding the quintessential charac...
This article explores how the Island of Ireland Peace Park, opened in 1998 in Belgium, intervenes in...
After examining the substantial efforts at land reclamation and environmental mitigation accompanyin...
All wars, large and small scale, have had impacts on the built environments enmeshed in the conflict...
This article examines how a post-1918 Edwardian commemorative aesthetic focused on the “English Gard...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal ...
In exploring the mnemonic role of gardens, this paper will first focus on the value of gardens as bo...
In commemorations of human lives lost in terrorism, European and American memorials increasingly app...
Preservation of historical remains is ridden with complexity. In particular, battle landscapes are m...
This article inspects the ways that spaces of war memorialization are organized and reorganized thro...
A comparative analysis of samples of external memorials from burial grounds in Britain, Ireland and ...
"Instead of Tombstones - a Tree, a Garden, a Grove": Early Israeli Forests as Environmental Memorial...
This thesis examines the development war memorialisation from 1860 until 2014 in the UK, France and ...
This article explores practices of memorialisation in post-conflict society, through the case study ...
All wars, large and small scale, have had impacts on the built environments enmeshed in the conflict...
Where once geographers could argue that the ideological issues surrounding the quintessential charac...
This article explores how the Island of Ireland Peace Park, opened in 1998 in Belgium, intervenes in...
After examining the substantial efforts at land reclamation and environmental mitigation accompanyin...
All wars, large and small scale, have had impacts on the built environments enmeshed in the conflict...
This article examines how a post-1918 Edwardian commemorative aesthetic focused on the “English Gard...