In our globally mediated age our relationship with the past is increasingly interpreted through the lens of our presentist media. Conventional means of representing and remembering historical events have to some extent been superseded, with technological advances permitting increasingly electronically mediated viewpoints. Indeed, new generations, fed on a diet of instantaneous information, possess new expectations of how the past should be viewed. This creates a problem for historians keen to retain a purist perspective on events, and, especially in respect of the Holocaust, the contemporary representation of which is the subject of much critical discourse and debate. This article examines one site of contemporary Holocaust representation: ...
New collective memory A new critical discourse on memory has emerged in recent times in response to ...
Historical events and social memories are increasingly articulated and accessed through the means of...
This paper deals with role of digital culture and ICT in rethinking Holocaust remembrance, arguing f...
In our globally mediated age our relationship with the past is increasingly interpreted through the ...
The Imperial War Museum’s (IWM) permanent Holocaust exhibition opened in June 2000 to general acclai...
Through an exploration of both past and present day reactions to the liberation of the Nazi concentr...
Holocaust exhibitions are known for their unique iconography, often constructed by means of exhibiti...
The Holocaust is a pervasive presence in British culture and society. Within the educational system ...
There is no denying that history is multi-faceted and complex. It is complex as it can be viewed, in...
The Author examines the presentation of the German occupation at the Warsaw Rising Museum and in Osk...
The Second World War is omnipresent in contemporary memory debates. As the war fades from living mem...
This study analyses how history museums in Austria, Hungary and Italy, represent the Holocaust. With...
Recent trends in Holocaust studies have addressed how forms of memorialization might transmit a cult...
The contemporary “reading” of history and the narrative of the past can assume various forms, one of...
This paper explores four roles played by Holocaust museums today, as sites of mass tourism; memorial...
New collective memory A new critical discourse on memory has emerged in recent times in response to ...
Historical events and social memories are increasingly articulated and accessed through the means of...
This paper deals with role of digital culture and ICT in rethinking Holocaust remembrance, arguing f...
In our globally mediated age our relationship with the past is increasingly interpreted through the ...
The Imperial War Museum’s (IWM) permanent Holocaust exhibition opened in June 2000 to general acclai...
Through an exploration of both past and present day reactions to the liberation of the Nazi concentr...
Holocaust exhibitions are known for their unique iconography, often constructed by means of exhibiti...
The Holocaust is a pervasive presence in British culture and society. Within the educational system ...
There is no denying that history is multi-faceted and complex. It is complex as it can be viewed, in...
The Author examines the presentation of the German occupation at the Warsaw Rising Museum and in Osk...
The Second World War is omnipresent in contemporary memory debates. As the war fades from living mem...
This study analyses how history museums in Austria, Hungary and Italy, represent the Holocaust. With...
Recent trends in Holocaust studies have addressed how forms of memorialization might transmit a cult...
The contemporary “reading” of history and the narrative of the past can assume various forms, one of...
This paper explores four roles played by Holocaust museums today, as sites of mass tourism; memorial...
New collective memory A new critical discourse on memory has emerged in recent times in response to ...
Historical events and social memories are increasingly articulated and accessed through the means of...
This paper deals with role of digital culture and ICT in rethinking Holocaust remembrance, arguing f...