This paper offers an insight into the efforts made by war memorial organizations to remember those who served in the Global War on Terrorism (GWOT) and how the war is manifested in US cultural memory. To exemplify the ways the war is already being remembered by smaller communities and what upcoming plans to memorialize the GWOT in a nation-wide context look like, several memorials are analyzed according to the emotions they elicit and how these influence the memorials’ narratives. The article is concluded by examining which elements of the memorials’ war narratives are highlighted, and which are omitted
An understanding of the Wars on Terror within their historical context, and alongside their historic...
September 11 has been etched on our memories. This article explores the uses and problems of memory ...
Much has been written about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, an element often...
This paper will discuss the rhetoric surrounding the plan to construct a national memorial for the G...
This thesis project argues that memorials constructed after 9/11 were designed specifically in a way...
How do societies and states represent the historical, moral, and political weight of the terrorist a...
We apply a cultural psychology approach to collective memory of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In parti...
War memory and commemoration have had increasingly high profiles in public and academic debates in r...
This black and white sixteen page document features an article from Kansas History: A journal of the...
In March 2003 (the eve of Iraq’s invasion) the George W. Bush Administration reissued, extended, and...
Memorials and commemorations typically reinforce narratives that create and support group identity a...
As the world approaches the 100th anniversary of the “War to End All Wars,” the mind can’t help but ...
Terrorism and atrocities have scarred the public memory in the late twentieth and early twenty-...
This article focuses on challenges in the commemoration of war dead for peace education, drawing on ...
Due to a stunning defeat in Vietnam, the years following the conflict were full of denial, shame, an...
An understanding of the Wars on Terror within their historical context, and alongside their historic...
September 11 has been etched on our memories. This article explores the uses and problems of memory ...
Much has been written about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, an element often...
This paper will discuss the rhetoric surrounding the plan to construct a national memorial for the G...
This thesis project argues that memorials constructed after 9/11 were designed specifically in a way...
How do societies and states represent the historical, moral, and political weight of the terrorist a...
We apply a cultural psychology approach to collective memory of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In parti...
War memory and commemoration have had increasingly high profiles in public and academic debates in r...
This black and white sixteen page document features an article from Kansas History: A journal of the...
In March 2003 (the eve of Iraq’s invasion) the George W. Bush Administration reissued, extended, and...
Memorials and commemorations typically reinforce narratives that create and support group identity a...
As the world approaches the 100th anniversary of the “War to End All Wars,” the mind can’t help but ...
Terrorism and atrocities have scarred the public memory in the late twentieth and early twenty-...
This article focuses on challenges in the commemoration of war dead for peace education, drawing on ...
Due to a stunning defeat in Vietnam, the years following the conflict were full of denial, shame, an...
An understanding of the Wars on Terror within their historical context, and alongside their historic...
September 11 has been etched on our memories. This article explores the uses and problems of memory ...
Much has been written about the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, however, an element often...