Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with these old statues, moving away from viewing them as nineteenth-century memory culture relics and transforming them into more dynamic parts of society which more accurately reflect the many different people now residing in it
In Australia, calls for the removal of memorials to white colonists escalated during 2020, as the in...
What societies choose to remember about the Past can pose challenges for professional gatekeepers in...
Remembering the past is not as straight forward as it might appear. The histories that we choose to ...
Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with the...
Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that ...
In an era of reconciliation and truth-telling, many have questioned the symbolic power of statues. A...
Can we engage in the discussion around colonial monuments if we not are prepared to engage in potent...
There is debate about how the Aboriginal past can and should be memorialised. This paper utilises a ...
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
In working on this edition Keira Lindsay and Mariko Smith have asked ‘whether monuments should be d...
This article explores some of the recent debates over statues, memorials and cultures of commemorati...
This article provides an outline of the current statue wars in Australia, England, America, New Zeal...
Memorials to white explorers and pioneers long stood (virtually) unchallenged in the heart of Austra...
Memorials as a form of public history allow us to chart the complex interactions and negotiations be...
Understanding History’s history requires reading and analysing the texts it has produced across time...
In Australia, calls for the removal of memorials to white colonists escalated during 2020, as the in...
What societies choose to remember about the Past can pose challenges for professional gatekeepers in...
Remembering the past is not as straight forward as it might appear. The histories that we choose to ...
Ultimately, dialogical memorialisation is a way to promote critical thinking and engagement with the...
Following work on a master’s thesis about relocating monuments, the author reflects on the way that ...
In an era of reconciliation and truth-telling, many have questioned the symbolic power of statues. A...
Can we engage in the discussion around colonial monuments if we not are prepared to engage in potent...
There is debate about how the Aboriginal past can and should be memorialised. This paper utilises a ...
This contribution considers the current debates about the place of monuments, such as the statue of ...
In working on this edition Keira Lindsay and Mariko Smith have asked ‘whether monuments should be d...
This article explores some of the recent debates over statues, memorials and cultures of commemorati...
This article provides an outline of the current statue wars in Australia, England, America, New Zeal...
Memorials to white explorers and pioneers long stood (virtually) unchallenged in the heart of Austra...
Memorials as a form of public history allow us to chart the complex interactions and negotiations be...
Understanding History’s history requires reading and analysing the texts it has produced across time...
In Australia, calls for the removal of memorials to white colonists escalated during 2020, as the in...
What societies choose to remember about the Past can pose challenges for professional gatekeepers in...
Remembering the past is not as straight forward as it might appear. The histories that we choose to ...