Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that public monuments form an archaeological record of a society, arguing that by thinking of monuments as archaeology rather than history, viewers are encouraged to see the objects as a living record of society, rather than as historical objects about the individuals or events being memorialised. As with any archaeology, recording the artefacts and their contexts is also important, and these concepts are explored with regards to statues and public monuments
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
What societies choose to remember about the Past can pose challenges for professional gatekeepers in...
This article addresses human rights issues of the built environment via the presence of monuments in...
Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that ...
Cultures throughout the world have expended great amounts of energy in the practice of monument cons...
The Fall of Monuments: a Public History Monuments have, for a few years now, been hitting the headli...
In working on this edition Keira Lindsay and Mariko Smith have asked ‘whether monuments should be d...
Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with the...
Can we engage in the discussion around colonial monuments if we not are prepared to engage in potent...
A monument not only brings forward into the present the values of the subject it is commemorating, b...
Decision makers are being increasingly called on to confront controversial urban histories to create...
My project works with the philosophical concepts of history, memory, and narrative to approach monum...
There has recently been a focus on the question of statue removalism. This concerns what to do with ...
The twentieth century generated a crisis of public monuments. This paper proposes a reflection on th...
This article takes as its point of departure the recent wave of contestations relating to colonial-e...
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
What societies choose to remember about the Past can pose challenges for professional gatekeepers in...
This article addresses human rights issues of the built environment via the presence of monuments in...
Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that ...
Cultures throughout the world have expended great amounts of energy in the practice of monument cons...
The Fall of Monuments: a Public History Monuments have, for a few years now, been hitting the headli...
In working on this edition Keira Lindsay and Mariko Smith have asked ‘whether monuments should be d...
Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with the...
Can we engage in the discussion around colonial monuments if we not are prepared to engage in potent...
A monument not only brings forward into the present the values of the subject it is commemorating, b...
Decision makers are being increasingly called on to confront controversial urban histories to create...
My project works with the philosophical concepts of history, memory, and narrative to approach monum...
There has recently been a focus on the question of statue removalism. This concerns what to do with ...
The twentieth century generated a crisis of public monuments. This paper proposes a reflection on th...
This article takes as its point of departure the recent wave of contestations relating to colonial-e...
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
What societies choose to remember about the Past can pose challenges for professional gatekeepers in...
This article addresses human rights issues of the built environment via the presence of monuments in...