Commemorations, Monuments and Public Memory
Humanities Research Centre, ANU, Canberra
2-4 August 2005
The call for papers for this conference attracted an extraordinary
amount of interest. More than three times as many papers were
offered than were expected. Given that we had taken a decision
to have all plenary sessions the selection process was thus particularly
difficult and many wonderfully interesting offers were refused.
The embarrassment of riches convinced us of the need to make
this conference the first in a series of events as part of the
HRC’s research platforms. It also meant that the program
was packed with a tremendous variety of papers on a range of subjects
given by presenters – local and international - from a range
of disciplines.
The interest in the call for papers was evident again in the
registrations for the conference itself and on opening morning
the Conference Room in Old Canberra House was filled to capacity.
Over the next three days we heard many excellent papers: from
Michael Levine’s opening reflections on what is a good monument
to Kate Douglas’s insight into the role of life narratives
in the migration museum in Adelaide; from Alex Tyrrell’s
invitation to share a front row seat at a battle of the monuments
in the Scottish highlands to Sian Supski’s investigation
of an Australian cultural icon, the Anzac biscuit; from Daniel
McInerney’s exploration of the evolving science of mnemonics
in antebellum America to Lisa Murray’s forensic examination
of funerary trends and popular culture in nineteenth century New
South Wales; from Peter Read and Marivic Wyndham’s poignant
comparison of the different fates of the Buena Vista Social Club
and the Havana Biltmore Yacht and Country Club in post-revolutionary
Cuba to Stephen Heathorn’s insight into the behind-the-scenes
role of a civil servant in the erection of monuments in London;
from Jennifer Steenshorne’s expose of the politics of street
names in New York to Robert Markley’s study of the commemoration
of common sailors in the eighteenth century.
With Anne Riggs we went on an artist’s tour of the Western
Front; with Jonathan White we walked down the mall in Washington
to view the Korean War Memorial (and listen to the political rhetoric
of the 1950s that sounded remarkably familiar in 2005). Christopher
Wilson gave us an overview of the funerary architecture of Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk and located it within Ankara’s townscape (and
pointed to the contrast between the Turkish capital and Canberra)
and Sabine Marschall explored the monumental landscape of post-Apartheid
South Africa. Colin Long pondered the significance of anti-Communist
iconoclasm in the 1990s and Laurence Gourievidis explored the
use of Hebridean Cairns to tell stories embedded in modern concerns.
Among so many excellent contributions a particular highlight was
provided by Barbara Diefendorf who rediscovered the significance
of the discreet statue of Gaspard de Coligny, the murdered leader
of France’s Protestants, on Paris’s bustling Rue de
Rivoli, and explored representations of the St Bartholomew’s
massacre over the past 400 years.
Amidst the vast array of subject matter there were clusters of
papers on particular themes. Jenny MacLeod and Bill Taylor examined
war memorials in Edinburgh and Melbourne respectively; Lynn Paxon
and John Burton explored the contested memorialisation of war,
frontier violence and Native American resistance; Andrew Beattie,
Anne Rothe, Hsiu-Ling Kuo and Jeffry Diefendorf gave papers on
competitive remembrance in post-war and post unification Germany;
and Clare Robinson and Judith Dupré gave evocative and
moving papers on the aftermath of 9/11.
Another highlight in the program – despite the chill of
a Canberra winter – was the evening visit to the Australian
War Memorial. We were treated to a tour and informative presentation
on several features of the memorial, including a private viewing
of the Hall of Memory, graced as it is by the Tomb of the Unknown
soldier, Napier Waller’s stained glass windows and mosaics
and Janet Lawrence’s stunning four pillar sculpture representing
earth, air, fire and water. We also enjoyed the hospitality of
one Canberra’s most important cultural institutions.
Over the course of three long days there were several common
themes and insights that emerged from the papers. The first was
methodological. It became clear that the study of commemoration
and public memory through monuments, architecture, material culture
and other forms of commemoration is a subject that is particularly
amenable to an inter-disciplinary approach. Students of history,
architecture, cultural studies, politics, literature, heritage
and art had a common language to speak. The second relates to
time. It is clear from many of the papers that the timing of a
commemoration is crucial to its place in public memory: its original
meaning and the intention of those who erected it might well be
quickly forgotten but it can be rediscovered and reinterpreted
again and again. The difficulties of memorialising fraught episodes
in the very recent past were strongly evident. Other issues to
emerge included the changing attitudes to war memorials and the
problems that they raise in the postmodern world, and the fundamental
change from the memorial as a commemoration of the ‘great
and good’ to the inclusive memorial that rescues ignored
stories and subaltern groups.
Numerous participants commented that the Conference gained momentum
and sustained common purpose which underscored the value of plenary
sessions. Several presenters lamented that more time had not been
set aside for general discussion although they recognised that
this would have meant fewer papers.
Undoubtedly many of the papers will quickly find their way into
print and a collected volume of essays based on a selection of
papers is planned.
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