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Survivor Memorials: Remembering Trauma and Loss in Contemporary Australia

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Survivor Memorials: Remembering Trauma and Loss in Contemporary Australia

Contributors:
ISBN:

9781760800260

Publisher:

UWA Publishing

Imprint:

UWA Publishing

Publication Date:

1st March 2019

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Architecture: public, commercial and industrial buildings
Museology and heritage studies

Dewey:

994

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

270

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Weight:

500g

Description

This is a book about memorials specifically about a new type of memorial that commemorates experiences of survivors. These new memorials acknowledge loss and trauma that people have lived through, rather than died because of. It is also a book about why people feel the need to remember such difficult experiences. As such, it combines a topic that has strong scholarly interest with human stories of pain and resilience from Australia's recent history.

The first half of the book outlines the emergence of this new genre of commemoration in three stages: early explorations through community and public art projects in the 1980s and 90s; the adoption of traditional memorial forms from the late 1990s; and the creation of government-funded and commissioned memorials as part of the adoption of transitional justice practices of symbolic reparations since the mid 2000s.

Alongside international interest in the field of memory studies, there is local interest in the stories behind these memorial projects. The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has already been the catalyst for a number of new memorial projects, and has produced clashes between survivors and church groups about the best ways to acknowledge their suffering. This book, therefore, is timely, as it offers an opportunity for people to learn from past experiences.

The book includes six case study chapters, each of which tell the story of the development of a different Australian memorial. The background to each of these projects is a heart-breaking story of loss and trauma, but many of the stories of the memorial development are stories of resilience, and of unlikely friendships and connections.

Author Bio

Alison Atkinson-Phillips is a social and cultural historian based at Newcastle University, UK. Alison joined the newly formed Oral History Unit and Collective at Newcastle University in January 2018. She is a former member of Bringing Them Home WA, an advocacy organization working to support survivors of the Stolen Generations, and former chair of the Uniting Church Social Justice Board (WA).

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