This article focuses on the 'hidden public culture' formed by individual memories of violent conflicts, with particular reference to the Lebanese Civil War (1975-90). Taking memory as a terrain through which individuals can contest authoritarian governance and repressive memory scripts, the article argues that personal memories of ordinary citizens can contribute to illuminate the power relations that structure war memorialisations. Through a series of interviews, the article analyses militia practices in a small town in North Metn to challenge the idea that militias were merely defending a territory from external enemies. Militia abuses against the populations they were meant to defend during the Civil War are also used as a starting point...
Soon after the Civil War’s end in 1990, the state in Lebanon has engaged in a discourse of amnesia, ...
In 1989, after the Ta\u27if agreement, the war in Lebanon started to fade, which ended years of one ...
In 1989, after the Ta\u27if agreement, the war in Lebanon started to fade, which ended years of one ...
This article examines three museums that address Lebanon's history of conflict: the newly opened Bei...
This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory practices are used to dea...
© The author(s) 2021. This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory pra...
This thesis explores the interface between collective memory, history and construction of identity i...
In this thesis I will be adressing the issue of the missing and the forcibly disappeared of the Leba...
In this thesis I will be adressing the issue of the missing and the forcibly disappeared of the Leba...
This paper explores the violent conflict between Lebanese Maronite and Druze communities that took p...
Civil war is perhaps the most catastrophic event that can befall a country, and yet the long-term po...
Civil war is perhaps the most catastrophic event that can befall a country, and yet the long-term po...
This article is interested in the formation of war legacies and how they interact with social identi...
The memory of past conflicts remains largely obliterated among the Lebanese diasporas in Montreal. N...
This article is interested in the formation of war legacies and how they interact with social identi...
Soon after the Civil War’s end in 1990, the state in Lebanon has engaged in a discourse of amnesia, ...
In 1989, after the Ta\u27if agreement, the war in Lebanon started to fade, which ended years of one ...
In 1989, after the Ta\u27if agreement, the war in Lebanon started to fade, which ended years of one ...
This article examines three museums that address Lebanon's history of conflict: the newly opened Bei...
This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory practices are used to dea...
© The author(s) 2021. This supplementary issue looks at how informal, often unrecognised, memory pra...
This thesis explores the interface between collective memory, history and construction of identity i...
In this thesis I will be adressing the issue of the missing and the forcibly disappeared of the Leba...
In this thesis I will be adressing the issue of the missing and the forcibly disappeared of the Leba...
This paper explores the violent conflict between Lebanese Maronite and Druze communities that took p...
Civil war is perhaps the most catastrophic event that can befall a country, and yet the long-term po...
Civil war is perhaps the most catastrophic event that can befall a country, and yet the long-term po...
This article is interested in the formation of war legacies and how they interact with social identi...
The memory of past conflicts remains largely obliterated among the Lebanese diasporas in Montreal. N...
This article is interested in the formation of war legacies and how they interact with social identi...
Soon after the Civil War’s end in 1990, the state in Lebanon has engaged in a discourse of amnesia, ...
In 1989, after the Ta\u27if agreement, the war in Lebanon started to fade, which ended years of one ...
In 1989, after the Ta\u27if agreement, the war in Lebanon started to fade, which ended years of one ...