Memorialising Gallipoli: manufacturing memory at Anzac

The memorials of Gallipoli have not lost their power to move, confront and often even inspire their visitors. Their meanings are re-visited, even re-invented by each successive generation of Anzac pilgrim and, contrary to the simplistic mono-dimensional readings of some historians, the Peninsula’s c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public history review 2008-01, Vol.15 (2008)
1. Verfasser: Scates, Bruce
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The memorials of Gallipoli have not lost their power to move, confront and often even inspire their visitors. Their meanings are re-visited, even re-invented by each successive generation of Anzac pilgrim and, contrary to the simplistic mono-dimensional readings of some historians, the Peninsula’s commemorative landscape remains a site of fierce contestation. Pacifist and patriot, back packer and bereaved all interpret it differently. Moreover, the memorials of Gallipoli continue to alert us to different cultures of commemoration; Christian, secular and Islamic, Turkish, British, French and Australian.
ISSN:1833-4989
1833-4989
DOI:10.5130/phrj.v15i0.820