Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration

The concept of sacrifice plays a significant role in commemorative ritual because it aids collective amnesia and the forgetting of war trauma. Collective amnesia is the product of several processes, both official and individual, which work to disguise aspects of war trauma represented in war memoria...

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Main Author: Stephens, John
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:https://journals.lincoln.ac.nz/index.php/lr/article/view/811
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13426
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author Stephens, John
author_facet Stephens, John
author_sort Stephens, John
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The concept of sacrifice plays a significant role in commemorative ritual because it aids collective amnesia and the forgetting of war trauma. Collective amnesia is the product of several processes, both official and individual, which work to disguise aspects of war trauma represented in war memorial design and in the rituals accompanying war commemoration in memorial landscapes. Although many aspects of remembering and forgetting at war memorials exist in the present age, sacrifice is a concept still invoked to attach meaning to death in war. Although the major conflicts of the twentieth century have become more distant in time, trauma induced by war through the agency of postmemory is still disguised by the notion of sacrifice for the nation. As latter-day war memorials attempt to render different and more difficult aspects of war experience to those of the past, the concept of sacrifice continues to be evoked as a cover for the uncomfortable aspects of war remembrance.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-134262017-01-30T11:36:58Z Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration Stephens, John The concept of sacrifice plays a significant role in commemorative ritual because it aids collective amnesia and the forgetting of war trauma. Collective amnesia is the product of several processes, both official and individual, which work to disguise aspects of war trauma represented in war memorial design and in the rituals accompanying war commemoration in memorial landscapes. Although many aspects of remembering and forgetting at war memorials exist in the present age, sacrifice is a concept still invoked to attach meaning to death in war. Although the major conflicts of the twentieth century have become more distant in time, trauma induced by war through the agency of postmemory is still disguised by the notion of sacrifice for the nation. As latter-day war memorials attempt to render different and more difficult aspects of war experience to those of the past, the concept of sacrifice continues to be evoked as a cover for the uncomfortable aspects of war remembrance. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13426 https://journals.lincoln.ac.nz/index.php/lr/article/view/811 fulltext
spellingShingle Stephens, John
Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration
title Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration
title_full Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration
title_fullStr Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration
title_full_unstemmed Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration
title_short Concepts of Sacrifice and Trauma in Australian War Commemoration
title_sort concepts of sacrifice and trauma in australian war commemoration
url https://journals.lincoln.ac.nz/index.php/lr/article/view/811
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/13426