3 research outputs found

    Empire, War and Nation: Heritage Management Perspectives from Canada and Malta

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    This article offers recent insights on contested heritage from Canada and Malta. These contrasting geographical extremes span a range of heritage dissonances but share a common historical identity as successor states to the British Empire, entailing familiar postcolonial heritage equivocations. Dissonances between colonial and indigenous heritage meanings are discussed. The principal focus of the paper is the Empire at war, as an issue of heritage management in Ottawa, the capital of Canada, and in Malta; comparative insights are generated with resonance for other imperial successor states such as Australia, New Zealand and Singapore. In Ottawa the National Capital Commission is engaged in a delicate management of heritage evolution from the imperial past to the multicultural present, involving adjustment and diversification of heritage meanings in which the indigenous peoples and Canada's wartime/military history figure prominently. Malta's time-depth generates an embarrassment of heritage resources, necessitating choices as it moves from 'blue' seacoast to 'grey' heritage tourism; while earlier eras are favoured, the British imperial and military heritage is inescapable, especially the heroic shared defence of 1940-3, generating management issues over recency, postcoloniality, the naval legacy and the problem of marketing to the former enemy populations. Questions of whose heritage, using which resources of what period, for whose benefit and how managed, elicit a different range of answers in the two cases: British colonial heritage is too diverse to be value-generalised, and there is no single, immutable colonial template for postcolonial identity. However, the particular legacy of the Empire at war is notably formative in the evolution of succeeding national identities

    Sculpting a Canadian hero : shifting concepts of national identity in Ottawa's core area commemorations

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    The topic of collective memory or identity, as manifested in public commemorative monuments, offers rich possibilities for theoretical and analytical study. This thesis investigates the ongoing construction of national identity through a selection of major public monuments in what is referred to by the National Capital Commission as the "core area" of Canada's capital, an area defined by Confederation Boulevard. The figurative monuments studied include, but are not limited to, those located on Parliament Hill as well as monuments along Confederation Boulevard such as The Response (National War Memorial), Reconciliation (Peacekeeping Monument), the National Aboriginal Veterans Monument , and Terry Fox . Beginning with the first monument erected on Parliament Hill in 1885, and ending with the most recent additions in the new millennium, the thesis chronologically traces the identity-building process at work in the monuments through the overall theme of heroes, with specific themes of ethnicity and gender interwoven throughout the chapters. Using the monuments as primary sources, and drawing on insights from a number of deconstructive approaches, among them psychoanalytic and gender theory, I question and analyze the national identity-building process in order to assess how conceptions of "Canadianness" may have shifted over time. I conclude that although there appears to be a shift toward a more inclusive or diverse representation of Canadian identity in recent years, the underlying ideology has not changed significantly

    Redefining military memorials and commemoration and how they have changed since the 19th century with a focus on Anglo-American practice

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    This thesis is a study of military memorials and commemoration with a focus on Anglo-American practice. The main question is: How has history defined military memorials and commemoration and how have they changed since the 19th century. In an effort to resolve this, the work examines both historic and contemporary forms of memorials and commemoration and establishes that remembrance in sites of collective memory has been influenced by politics, conflicts and religion. Much has been written since the Great War about remembrance and memorialization; however, there is no common lexicon throughout the literature. In order to better explain and understand this complex subject, the work includes an up-to-date literature review and for the first time, terminologies are properly explained and defined. Particular attention is placed on recognizing important military legacies, being familiar with spiritual influences and identifying classic and new signs of remembrance. The thesis contends that commemoration is composed of three key principles – recognition, respect and reflection – that are intractably linked to the fabric of memorials. It also argues that it is time for the study of memorials to come of age and proposes Memorialogy as an interdisciplinary field of study of memorials and associated commemorative practices. Moreover, a more modern, adaptive, General Classification System is presented as a means of identifying and re-defining memorials according to certain groups, types and forms. Lastly, this thesis examines how peacekeeping and peace support operations are being memorialized and how the American tragic events of 11 September 2001 and the war in Afghanistan have forever changed the nature of memorials and commemoration within Canada and elsewhere. This work goes beyond what has been studied and written about over the last century and provides a deeper level of analysis and a fresh approach to understanding the field of Memorialogy
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