Projects / Programmes
Reformulating memory propaganda and commemoration as an integral part of the cultural history of the first world war
Code |
Science |
Field |
Subfield |
6.01.00 |
Humanities |
Historiography |
|
Code |
Science |
Field |
H250 |
Humanities |
Contemporary history (since 1914) |
Introducting curtural history, sistematic re-construction of the domestic (internal) front
Researchers (3)
no. |
Code |
Name and surname |
Research area |
Role |
Period |
No. of publicationsNo. of publications |
1. |
01008 |
PhD Oto Luthar |
Historiography |
Head |
2004 - 2007 |
0 |
2. |
11698 |
PhD Petra Svoljšak |
Humanities |
Researcher |
2004 - 2007 |
0 |
3. |
06397 |
PhD Jelica Šumič Riha |
Philosophy |
Researcher |
2004 - 2007 |
0 |
Organisations (1)
Abstract
The First World War brought watershed changes to the existing commemorative practices, leading to the formation of collective memory. Similar to in the West, Northern Europe, the United States and Australia, the dead began to "return to among the living" in a new fashion. New conceptualisation of national communities were formed, and with them, along with new forms of memorialising their war victims. A romantic presentation of the fallen soldiers, who had previously lived mostly in the memory of their kin or narrow communities, was replaced by the figure of national heroes. The names chiselled into parish memorial plaques and the individuals lost in the sea of crosses in military cemeteries and faces in group photographs, which while becoming completely anonymous, also began to represent a new community with recognisable characteristics.