Abstract
Archaeological approaches to death and commemoration which privilege the negotiation of power relationships can underestimate the importance of personal and emotional responses to bereavement and mortality. Remembrance of the dead of the First World War is often understood in terms of the promotion of nationalist ideologies, but emotional factors such as grief and shock were also involved in the shaping of commemorative responses. In this article, responses to the First World War at national, local, and individual levels are considered. I suggest that people select monuments, places and ways of remembering for their power to express intense and personal feelings.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Archaeology,Cultural Studies,Archaeology
Reference61 articles.
1. Wurst L. , 1991. ‘Employees must be of moral and temperate habits’: rural and urban elite ideologies, in McGuire &Paynter (eds.), 125–49.
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29 articles.
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