Com-Memoration of the Great War: Tourists and remembrance on the western front

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Institute for the Study of French-Australian Relations (ISFAR)

Abstract

Social memory changes in response to the characteristics and needs of each generation, thus it can often present a somewhat more favourable perspective on past events, compared with historical reality. In the lead up to the centenary of the Great War, 1914-1918, the Australian government sought to intensify its commemorative focus in Europe to the battles around the village of Villers-Bretonneux, the site of the Australian National Memorial in France, and since 2018, the Sir John Monash Centre. This appears to have initiated a process of sight sacralisation, which may lead to the creation of a ‘commemorative bubble’ that narrows Australians’ views of the war. It remains to be seen, whether or not the site at Villers-Bretonneux leads to the development of a broader understanding by Australians of the Great War, or in fact narrows it. Other nations in Europe have also changed their focus, but moved towards an international perspective, that acknowledges a common war experience for all of the nations involved.

Description

The library currently does not have access to the full text of this article.

Citation

Winter, C. (2021). Com-Memoration of the Great War: Tourists and remembrance on the Western Front. The French Australian Review, 69:4-26.

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

William Angliss Institute is the Government endorsed specialist training provider for the foods, tourism, hospitality and events industries. Over more than 85 years we have earned a strong global reputation for the delivery of innovative higher education, training solutions and consultancy services to clients across Australia and abroad. Read more...