Academic literature on the topic 'Commemorating'

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Journal articles on the topic "Commemorating"

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Papazian, Sabrina. "The Cost of Memorializing: Analyzing Armenian Genocide Memorials and Commemorations in the Republic of Armenia and in the Diaspora." International Journal for History, Culture and Modernity 7, no. 1 (November 2, 2019): 55–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.18352/hcm.534.

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In April of 1965 thousands of Armenians gathered in Yerevan and Los Angeles, demanding global recognition of and remembrance for the Armenian Genocide after fifty years of silence. Since then, over 200 memorials have been built around the world commemorating the victims of the Genocide and have been the centre of hundreds of marches, vigils and commemorative events. This article analyzes the visual forms and semiotic natures of three Armenian Genocide memorials in Armenia, France and the United States and the commemoration practices that surround them to compare and contrast how the Genocide is being memorialized in different Armenian communities. In doing so, this article questions the long-term effects commemorations have on an overall transnational Armenian community. Ultimately, it appears that calls for Armenian Genocide recognition unwittingly categorize the global Armenian community as eternal victims, impeding the development of both the Republic of Armenia and the Armenian diaspora.
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Narvselius, Eleonora, and Igor Pietraszewski. "Academics Executed on the Wulecki Hills in L’viv: From a Local Wartime Crime to a Translocal Memory Event." Slavic Review 79, no. 1 (2020): 139–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/slr.2020.13.

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In 2011, a monument commemorating a group of Polish academics killed during the Nazi occupation was unveiled at the site of their death in L΄viv, presently a Ukrainian city. This event became the pinnacle of a commemoration that had developed quite autonomously on both sides of the redrawn Polish-(Soviet)Ukrainian border. The commemorative project and memory event underpinning it are especially interesting owing to the partial recuperation of links with the prewar local genealogies of the Polish-Ukrainian borderland. This article explores how a special historic occurrence that took place in wartime L΄viv/Lwów became an issue of continual political significance invested with different truth, originality, and identity claims in Poland and Ukraine. The authors focus on various actors who managed to transform memory about the murdered academics into a public commemorative project and elevate the role of translocal links in the successful realization of the commemorative initiative in question. The concluding part summarizes principal lessons pertaining to commemoration of perished population groups in east-central European borderlands that might be drawn on the basis of the discussed case.
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Lloyd, David. "1913–1916–1919." Modernist Cultures 13, no. 3 (August 2018): 445–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/mod.2018.0221.

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This essay discusses the three poems that Yeats titled with dates, ‘September 1913’, ‘Easter 1916’, and ‘Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen’, in the context of ongoing centenary commemorations of the period of Irish decolonization. It does so by juxtaposing the historical function of dating and commemorating with the virtual possibility of encounters that never quite happened, establishing a trajectory through Yeats's poems that runs from James Connolly's not meeting Rosa Luxemburg to Paul Celan's commemoration of her murder in the 1919 Spartacist uprising in a poem from the late volume Schneepart. Drawing on Jacques Derrida's reading of Celan and the date, the essay uses this constellation of possibilities to reflect on the stakes of a commemoration that entertains possibility rather than closing off the past.
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Creyghton, Camille. "Commemorating Jules Michelet, 1876, 1882, 1898: The productivity of banality." French History 33, no. 3 (May 31, 2019): 399–421. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/fh/crz022.

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Abstract Between 1870 and 1900 three commemorative events for Jules Michelet took place in France: his burial at the Père Lachaise cemetery in 1876, the unveiling of his monument in 1882 and the national commemoration of his centenary in 1898. The republican historian was thus a major figure in Third Republic memory culture, while he was also considered one of its sources of inspiration. This article examines how throughout successive commemorations Michelet’s legacy was appropriated and popularized by the regime and how this resulted in what can be called a ‘banalizing of memory’. Furthermore, it argues that this banalizing process, despite criticism based on Michelet’s own work, was productive and led to an expansion of the public’s awareness of Michelet. Rather than being a sign of declining memory, banality in some contexts was the most viable option for realizing the aims of a commemoration.
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Vance, Jonathan F. "Heroes for More Than One Day: Commemorating War." Canadian Historical Review 102, no. 3 (August 1, 2021): 454–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/chr-2020-0044.

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The commemoration of war is almost as old as war itself – and as war has changed so too has its commemoration. This article explores some of the changes, from the emergence of vernacular forms of memorialization to the process by which objects or practices take on commemorative meaning or, alternately, lose that commemorative meaning. Commercialization has had a significant impact on memorialization and so too has the advent of virtual commemoration, especially through social media. It concludes by surveying some of the challenges that historians of war commemoration may face in the Internet age, even in the face of some striking similarities in the nature of war memorialization.
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LACEY, ANDREW. "The Office for King Charles the Martyr in the Book of Common Prayer, 1662–1685." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 53, no. 3 (July 2002): 510–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046901008740.

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This article investigates the development of the use of texts and images in commemorating the regicide of Charles I , from private commemoration among Royalists during the Republic, to its official institution after the Restoration. The article will argue that the Office gave official sanction to an image of the virtuous suffering king which had been in existence even before his execution. The Office also presented a particular view of the king's moral character, the causes of the Civil War and the Restoration which was to become the accepted account expounded in commemorative sermons for the next 150 years. Drawing on Old Testament themes, the Office also aimed to point a political moral used by successive governments, namely that attacks on the established order incurred divine punishment.
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Evershed, Jonathan. "A war that stopped a war? The necropolitics of (Northern) Ireland’s First World War centenary." Global Discourse 9, no. 3 (September 1, 2019): 537–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/263168919x15671868126815.

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The recent ‘recovery’ of First World War memory in Ireland has been much discussed and widely celebrated. What has been represented as Ireland’s centennial reacquaintance with its Great War heritage has been framed by a wider ‘Decade of Centenaries’: a policy construct through which a more reconciliatory approach to commemorating the violent events which gave birth to the two states on the island of Ireland has been promoted. The Decade has seen the ascendance of joint British–Irish First World War commemorations, and attempts have been made to use commemoration to bridge the ‘communal’ divide between unionism and nationalism. In this article, I interrogate this new commemorative dispensation and the assumptions that underwrite it. I argue that the reconciliatory reorientation of commemoration in Ireland during the Decade of Centenaries is based on an ethically contradictory and militaristic reframing of the First World War as ‘a war that stopped a war’. Eliding the ways in which the War has actually long been remembered in nationalist Ireland, this reframing is representative of and acts to reinforce the wider anti-political project in which the British and Irish states have been jointly involved since the advent of the peace process. Arguing that the (necro)politics of Ireland’s First World War centenary have represented the slaughter of Irishmen on Flanders’ fields as a symbolic sacrifice for a particular, neoliberal ‘peace’ in (Northern) Ireland, I will conclude that the limits of this project have been radically revealed by recent political events which have called its future hegemony into doubt.
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Gkinopoulos, Theofilos. "Identity entrepreneurship in political commemorations: A longitudinal quantitative content analysis of commemorative speeches by leaders of parties in power and opposition before and during the Greek economic crisis." Journal of Social and Political Psychology 8, no. 2 (September 16, 2020): 582–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.5964/jspp.v8i2.1061.

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This study analyses quantitatively the content of thirty-nine political speeches made by political leaders of three political parties – New Democracy, Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) and Coalition of the Radical Left (SYRIZA) – of different status represented in the Greek parliament. The leaders of these parties release annual commemorative speeches of the restoration of Greek democracy on 24th July 1974. The focus of this study is on longitudinally analysing the content of commemorative speeches, looking at how political leaders communicate the historical event, by quantifying through a content analysis various forms of ingroups and outgroups in their annual commemorations. Such constructions were ventured during a period of 13 years, from 2004 to 2016, before and during the break out of financial crisis in 2010. Longitudinal quantitative content analysis identified differences in the use of we-referencing and they-referencing language, varying per status of parties and context of release of commemorative speeches. I view commemorative speeches as a non-neutral history-related business that requires mobilisation of audiences in different ways and different contexts. Implications of commemorating the historical past across time as institutional identity practice are discussed.
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Murakami, Kyoko. "Commemoration reconsidered: Second World War Veterans’ reunion as pilgrimage." Memory Studies 7, no. 3 (June 17, 2014): 339–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1750698014530623.

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This article recognises the crucial role cultural and social contexts play in shaping individual and collective recollections. Such recollections involve multiple, intertwined levels of experience in the real world such as commemorating a war. Thus, the commemoration practised in a particular context deserves an empirical investigation. The methodological approach taken is naturalistic, as it situates commemoration as remembering and recollection in the real world of things and people. I consider the case of a war veterans’ reunion as an analogy for a pilgrimage, and in that pilgrimage-like transformative process, we can observe the dynamics of remembering that is mediated with artefacts and involves people’s interactions with the social environment. Furthermore, remembering, recollection and commemorating the war can be approached in terms of embodied interactions with culturally and historically organised materials. In this article, I will review the relevant literature on key topics and concepts including pilgrimage, transformation and liminality and communitas in order to create a theoretical framework. I present an analysis and discussion on the ethnographic fieldwork on the Burma Campaign (of the Second World War) veterans’ reunion. The article strives to contribute to the critical forum of memory research, highlighting the significance of a holistic and interdisciplinary exposition of the vital role context plays in the practice of commemorating war.
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Bucur, Maria. "Of Crosses, Winged Victories, and Eagles: Commemorative Contests between Official and Vernacular Voices in Interwar Romania." East Central Europe 37, no. 1 (2010): 31–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187633010x488308.

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AbstractThis essay examines contests between local practices and central institutions over the meaning and cultural practices linked to the nation, focusing in particular on commemorations of the war dead after 1918. The analysis shows that the ability of the state to control how nationalism was celebrated through commemorations of the Great War was by no means determined or even successfully mediated from the center. In fact, local voices in rural settings often had their own rituals for mourning those that died in war and also for commemorating heroism in localized versions of what sacrifice for the nation and mourning heroes might have meant. In discussing vernacular-official contests over commemorating war heroes, this essay will present several important aspects: the relationship between traditional religious symbols and the new secular official symbols in representing nationalism; the relationship between rural and urban settings for understanding the unsuccessful attempts of the state to impose its version of war commemorations; and the relationship between the Romanian majority and other ethnic groups in these contests.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Commemorating"

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Ahlqvist, Emelie. "Commemorating the a(s)telier." Thesis, KTH, Arkitektur, 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-276787.

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This is a project on the topic of living and working and it consists of two parts. The first is a research thesis analyzing the development of the atelier typology from the 1860s until today. The second part is a proposal for a new architectural typology, that combines spaces for dwelling with those of production and labor. The project is set in Stockholm. My study shows a gradual loss of the concept of the atelier as a combined/multifaceted typology. Throughout the years studied, the place to produce has gradually separated itself from both the space of dwelling and the place of consumption. My interest lies in speculating on bringing them together again, in my proposal for a new architectural typology; the ’super villa garage’. To briefly conclude, I here identify the atelier as a place of convergence between cultural production and domestic life. A space that blurs the line between the two spheres and challenges the division of dwelling and labor. As a typology that shifts the boundaries between the private, the communal, and the public I believe that it has the potential to generate new ways of living and working, as well as give new possibilities for interaction and integration with local contexts.
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Dolan, A. "Commemorating the Irish Civil War, 1923-2000." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.598583.

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To say what this thesis is is to say what it is not. It is not a history of the Irish Civil War. War is a past thing, a remembered or forgotten thing. The whys and the wherefores are taken for granted. It begins instead at the end of civil war. Secondly, it is not a study of republican memory. Republicanism has quite a singular approach to its dead. Death, there, is a simpler thing. Men die for Ireland; death is an inspiration complete the republican task. That is not to diminish its experience of civil war. It is instead to focus on the more troubled experience of remembering the Free State dead. The emphasis is not part of any elaborate exercise in rehabilitation. The question of what was and was not done in the woods in Kerry is not at issue here. The dead, or rather their commemoration, is the prime concern of this thesis; how the winners of a war no one wished to fight express whether there is of pride, sorrow, bitterness, triumphalism, shame. The Free State dead are merely the more evocative examples of this dilemma. After civil war can the winners honour their victory; can they commemorate it, can they hail their conquering heroes with the blood of their comrades still fresh on their boots? Or does civil war, by its very nature, demand silence? Should the winners cover themselves in shame, bow their heads and hope that the nation forgets 'our lamentable spasm of national madness'? What is a poor victorious state to do; all the time watched by a vigilant empire, all the time wary of an enemy which only stopped fighting but never surrounded its arms? It is this conflict of impulses, the tussle of memory and forgetting that is imperative here. Hence it is addressed at its most public point, at the very point at which it becomes part of the landscape, at the statutes and crosses, in the ritual and rhetoric of commemoration. Indeed it is at the foot of these cenotaphs and crosses that this thesis poses its central questions. What is particular about the memory of civil war? What is particular to the Irish example when Europe has inscribed its grief in lieux de mémoire? What is its legacy? Was the bitterness as deep as the silence would suggest or was it convenient, merely the means to more superficial party political ends?
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McMahon, Colin. "Quarantining the past, commemorating the great Irish famine on Grosse-Ile." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 2001. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk3/ftp05/MQ64009.pdf.

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Stefanou, Eleni. "Aspects of identity and nationhood : commemorating, representing and replicating the Greek maritime past." Thesis, University of Southampton, 2008. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.494688.

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Ushiyama, Rin. "Memory struggles : narrating and commemorating the Aum Affair in contemporary Japan, 1994-2015." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2017. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/267895.

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This dissertation investigates how different stakeholders have competed over the interpretation and commemoration of the Aum Affair. The Aum Affair was a series of crimes committed by new religious movement Aum Shinrikyō between 1988 and 1995, which culminated in the gassing of the Tokyo subway system using sarin in March 1995. The Tokyo attack was the largest act of terrorism in post-war Japan. I combine qualitative methods of media analysis, interviews, and participant observation to analyse how different stakeholders have narrated and commemorated the Aum Affair. I propose ‘collective trauma’ as a revised theory of ‘cultural trauma’ to describe an event which is represented as harmful and indelible to collective memory and identity. In contrast to ‘cultural trauma’, which stresses the importance of symbolic representations of traumatic events, ‘collective trauma’ considers other ‘material’ processes – such as establishing facts, collective action, state responses, and litigation – which also contribute to trauma construction. My overarching argument is that various stakeholders – including state authorities, mass media, public intellectuals, victims, and former Aum believers – have constructed the Aum Affair as a collective trauma in multiple and conflicting ways. Many media representations situated Aum as an evil ‘cult’ which ‘brainwashed’ believers and intended to take over Japan through terror. State authorities also responded by treating Aum as a dangerous terrorist group. In some instances, these binary representations of Japan locked in a struggle against an evil force led to municipal governments violating the civil rights of Aum believers. Some individuals such as public intellectuals and former believers have challenged this divisive view by treating Aum as a ‘religion’, not a ‘cult’, and locating the root causes of Aum’s growth in Japanese society. Additionally, victims and former members have pursued divergent goals such as retributive justice, financial reparations, and social reconciliation through their public actions. A key conclusion of this dissertation is that whilst confronting horrific acts of violence may require social construction of collective trauma using cultural codes of good and evil, the entrenchment of these symbolic categories can result in lasting social tension and division.
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Reed, Bradford Lee. "Revitalizing a city by commemorating the past museum of industry & waterfront redevelopment, Norwich, Connecticut /." College Park, Md. : University of Maryland, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1903/2168.

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Thesis (M. Arch.) -- University of Maryland, College Park, 2004.
Thesis research directed by: School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Title from t.p. of PDF. Includes bibliographical references. Published by UMI Dissertation Services, Ann Arbor, Mich. Also available in paper.
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Bartels, Rusty Ray. "War Memories, Imperial Ambitions| Commemorating World War II in the US Pacific National Park System." Thesis, University of California, Davis, 2016. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10165868.

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This project argues that the National Park Service (NPS) functions as an agent of the state in perpetuating American imperialism throughout the Pacific World through presenting WWII narratives of sacrifice as worthy of inclusion into the nation. These narratives, I argue, reinforce American occupation in islands and regions that have contested relations to the nation. This project is informed by scholarship in rhetorical criticism of public memory and in American Studies analyses of the nation as an empire. Methodologically, I have combined fieldwork at each park site and official public interpretive materials, with historical archives related to the formation, design, and management of the parks to understand the relationship between past and present. Part I of this project examines War in the Pacific National Historical Park in the American territory of Guam and American Memorial Park in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. I focus my argument here on how NPS narratives of WWII cannot be separated from historical and contemporary American military interests in the Mariana Islands and the Pacific World. Part II approaches the three units of the World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument in Hawai’i, Alaska, and California, with each state’s focus, development, and accessibility being appreciably different. I argue that all are concerned with the legacies of militarized land use and narratives of sacrifice for and belonging to the nation.

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Stone, Aaron H. ""Never forget" and "Never unite" : commemorating the Battle of the Somme in Northern Ireland, 1985-1997." Virtual Press, 2005. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1318905.

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This thesis examines Protestant unionist commemorations of the Battle of the Somme in Northern Ireland during a phase in which they exhibited marked popularity and politicization. Filling a gap in the scholarship and building upon it, this thesis pays closer attention to the historical context and development of these commemorations and takes into account a broader swath of forms and locations of commemoration. It argues that, in the face of the perceived threat of Irish unification posed by the Anglo-Irish Agreement in 1985, unionists employed the memory of the Somme as a political tool on two different but overlapping fronts. On one front, they used it against their collective opponents, who supported or supposedly supported Irish unification. On a second front, conflicting groups within the unionist community, namely unionist politicians, Orangemen, Protestant youths, and loyalist paramilitaries, interpreted the Somme differently to satisfy their partisan agendas. Analyzing Somme commemoration at the Belfast cenotaph, in parades, and in murals, this thesis provides explanations for why the Somme was remembered differently in various mediums and locales of commemoration, with particular attention to the differing degrees and manners in which Protestant commemorators recognized the Catholic contribution in the Somme campaign.
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McDowell, Sara. "Commemorating the Troubles : unravelling the representation of the contestation of memory in Northern Ireland since 1994." Thesis, University of Ulster, 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.445035.

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Quinn, Samantha. "Commemorating one hundred years of Italian unification : the 1961 centennial celebrations as they were held in Turin and Philadelphia." Thesis, University of Reading, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.567596.

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This thesis analyses the meaning of unity and unification in post-war Italian life through a transnational study of the two great events staged for the celebration of one hundred years of Italian unification: Italia '61 and the Festival of Italy. Held in Turin, Italia '61 was the Italian national celebration and the overall purpose was to put on display the 'progress made in Italy in 100 years of national life' and to make a statement about Italy's place in the Cold War world order. To do so it comprised three major components: a Historical Exhibition, which traced a history of unification focused on the Risorgimento and the Resistance; a Regional Exhibition; and the International Labour Exhibition, which contained displays on work practices and conditions from twenty-one nations and international organisations. Across the Atlantic in Philadelphia, the Festival of Italy was the largest Italian centennial commemoration held outside Italy and it had been planned in conjunction with the Italia '61 organisers and collaboratively with the Italian American community in Philadelphia. The Festival's theme was 'lOO years of Progress' and the corresponding exhibitions and events emphasised the cultural richness of Italy, the high culture of Italy, the contribution of Italy and Italian culture and people to contemporary civilisation and in particular to the U.5., and the modernity of contemporary Italy. This thesis presents the argument that 1961 represents a change or turning point in the way identity was celebrated and so conceived in both Italy and among Italian American communities. The effects of the reconfiguration are identified through analysis of the national, international, intergovernmental, ethnic and transnational relationships in operation at Italia '61 and the Festival of Italy.
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Books on the topic "Commemorating"

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Commemorating Epimetheus. West Lafayette, IN: Purdue University Press, 2008.

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Botsman, D. V., and Adam Clulow. Commemorating Meiji. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774.

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Parks Canada. National Historic Sites. Commemorating Canadian settlement patterns. [Ottawa]: Parks Canada, National Historic Sites, 2001.

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Parks Canada. National Historic Sites. Commemorating Canadian engineering achievements. [Ottawa]: Parks Canada, National Historic Sites, 2001.

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Canada. The National Parks and National Historic Sites of Canada. Commemorating Canadian settlement patterns. Ottawa: The National Parks and National Historic Sites of Canada, 2001.

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Canada. National Parks and Historic Sites of Canada. Commemorating Canadian engineering achievements. Ottawa: National Parks and Historic Sites of Canada, 2001.

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Gall, Sarah L. NASA Spinoffs: 30 year commemorative edition, commemorating International Space Year, 1992. [Washington, D.C.?]: Technology Transfer Division, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1992.

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T, Pramberger Joseph, and United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Technology Transfer Division., eds. NASA Spinoffs: 30 year commemorative edition, commemorating International Space Year, 1992. [Washington, D.C.?]: Technology Transfer Division, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1992.

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Chopra, Radhika. Commemorating hurt: Memorialising operation bluestar. Delhi: Department of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, 2008.

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Berrick, A. J., Man Chun Leung, and Xingwang Xu, eds. Topology and Geometry: Commemorating SISTAG. Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1090/conm/314.

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Book chapters on the topic "Commemorating"

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Hellyer, Robert. "The Meiji Restoration as a Local Event: The Second Kiheitai in History and Memory." In Commemorating Meiji, 57–76. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-5.

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Kapur, Nick. "The Empire Strikes Back? The 1968 Meiji Centennial Celebrations and the Revival of Japanese Nationalism." In Commemorating Meiji, 20–43. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-3.

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Hiroshi, Takagi, and D. V. Botsman. "The 50th and 60th Anniversaries of the Meiji Restoration: Memory, Commemoration and Political Culture in the Pre-War Period." In Commemorating Meiji, 44–56. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-4.

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Jaundrill, D. Colin. "Toba-Fushimi Revisited: Commemorating the Violence of the Restoration Moment." In Commemorating Meiji, 91–113. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-7.

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Botsman, D. V. "The Meiji Restoration and the Politics of Post-War Commemoration: 1968/2018." In Commemorating Meiji, 4–19. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-2.

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Botsman, D. V., and Adam Clulow. "Commemorating Meiji: History, Politics and the Politics of History." In Commemorating Meiji, 1–3. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-1.

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Walthall, Anne. "The Meiji Restoration Seen from English-speaking Countries." In Commemorating Meiji, 77–90. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003123774-6.

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Osborne, Peter D. "Commemorating the Present." In Photography and the Contemporary Cultural Condition, 1–26. New York : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2018. | Series: Routledge advances in art and visual studies: Routledge, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315818573-1.

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Eade, John, and Mario Katić. "Commemorating the dead." In Military Pilgrimage and Battlefield Tourism, 1–12. New York : Routledge, [2017] | Series: Routledge studies in pilgrimage, religious travel, and tourism: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315595436-1.

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Palagia, Olga. "Commemorating the Dead." In A Companion to Greek Architecture, 374–89. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118327586.ch26.

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Conference papers on the topic "Commemorating"

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Passfield, Robert W. "Commemorating Historic Engineering Landmarks in Canada." In Third National Congress on Civil Engineering History and Heritage. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/40594(265)21.

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Sokolov, Vladimir O. "S.B. Popov, Doctor of Engineering (Commemorating the 60th Birth Anniversary)." In Information Technology and Nanotechnology 2017. Samara University, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.18287/1613-0073-2017-1902-71-75.

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Wang, Jiqing. "Commemorating one of Maa Dah-You's last essential contributions to acoustics." In ICA 2013 Montreal. ASA, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1121/1.4799412.

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Fettweis, A. "Commemorating the einstein year: can multidimensional systems contribute to the foundations of physics?" In The Fourth International Workshop on Multidimensional Systems - NDS 2005. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/nds.2005.195320.

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Duda, Kevin R., Robert de Saint Phalle, Curtis Schroeder, Michael Johnson, Thomas Fill, Benjamin Miller, Anthony Ventura, et al. "Development of a Lunar Lander Simulator: Commemorating Apollo and Looking to the Future." In AIAA Scitech 2020 Forum. Reston, Virginia: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2514/6.2020-0371.

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Plominski, Arkadiusz. "DARK TOURISM AS ONE OF THE FORMS OF COMMEMORATING VICTIMS OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR IN POLAND." In 4th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference on Social Sciences and Arts SGEM2017. Stef92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2017/14/s04.025.

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Di Donato, Enrico, Adolfo Santini, and Nicola Moraci. "Maintenance of Functionality during Earthquakes: Structural and Non Structural Aspects." In 2008 SEISMIC ENGINEERING CONFERENCE: Commemorating the 1908 Messina and Reggio Calabria Earthquake. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2963778.

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Mattiozzi, Pierpaolo, Alexander Strom, Adolfo Santini, and Nicola Moraci. "Crossing Active Faults on the Sakhalin II Onshore Pipeline Route: Pipeline Design and Risk Analysis." In 2008 SEISMIC ENGINEERING CONFERENCE: Commemorating the 1908 Messina and Reggio Calabria Earthquake. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2963715.

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Mazzolani, Federico M., Adolfo Santini, and Nicola Moraci. "Advanced Techniques for Seismic Protection of Historical Buildings: Experimental and Numerical Approach." In 2008 SEISMIC ENGINEERING CONFERENCE: Commemorating the 1908 Messina and Reggio Calabria Earthquake. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2963716.

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Vitali, Luigino, Pierpaolo Mattiozzi, Adolfo Santini, and Nicola Moraci. "Crossing Active Faults on the Sakhalin II Onshore Pipeline Route: Analysis Methodology and Basic Design." In 2008 SEISMIC ENGINEERING CONFERENCE: Commemorating the 1908 Messina and Reggio Calabria Earthquake. AIP, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2963717.

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Reports on the topic "Commemorating"

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Steeves, Brye. Podcast commemorating Black History Month, LANL history Lab Historian talks with member of first Black family to live in Los Alamos. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1762726.

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O'Brien, K. Toponymic commemorations of Confederation. Natural Resources Canada/ESS/Scientific and Technical Publishing Services, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.4095/298435.

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Bineham, Michael L. Special Operations Commemoration: Monuments, Memory & Memorialization Practices of Elite Organizations. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada592740.

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Steeves, Brye. Classified library celebrates two-year anniversary print your own commemorative history posters. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1784690.

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Bernhard, J. T., P. E. Mayes, D. Schaubert, and R. J. Mailloux. A Commemoration of Deschamps� and Sichak�s �Microstrip Microwave Antennas�: 50 Years of Development, Divergence, and New Directions. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, November 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada457574.

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Cox, Jeremy. The unheard voice and the unseen shadow. Norges Musikkhøgskole, August 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22501/nmh-ar.621671.

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Abstract:
The French composer Francis Poulenc had a profound admiration and empathy for the writings of the Spanish poet Federico García Lorca. That empathy was rooted in shared aspects of the artistic temperament of the two figures but was also undoubtedly reinforced by Poulenc’s fellow-feeling on a human level. As someone who wrestled with his own homosexuality and who kept his orientation and his relationships apart from his public persona, Poulenc would have felt an instinctive affinity for a figure who endured similar internal conflicts but who, especially in his later life and poetry, was more open about his sexuality. Lorca paid a heavy price for this refusal to dissimulate; his arrest in August 1936 and his assassination the following day, probably by Nationalist militia, was accompanied by taunts from his killers about his sexuality. Everything about the Spanish poet’s life, his artistic affinities, his personal predilections and even the relationship between these and his death made him someone to whom Poulenc would be naturally drawn and whose untimely demise he would feel keenly and might wish to commemorate musically. Starting with the death of both his parents while he was still in his teens, reinforced by the sudden loss in 1930 of an especially close friend, confidante and kindred spirit, and continuing throughout the remainder of his life with the periodic loss of close friends, companions and fellow-artists, Poulenc’s life was marked by a succession of bereavements. Significantly, many of the dedications that head up his compositions are ‘to the memory of’ the individual named. As Poulenc grew older, and the list of those whom he had outlived lengthened inexorably, his natural tendency towards the nostalgic and the elegiac fused with a growing sense of what might be termed a ‘survivor’s anguish’, part of which he sublimated into his musical works. It should therefore come as no surprise that, during the 1940s, and in fulfilment of a desire that he had felt since the poet’s death, he should turn to Lorca for inspiration and, in the process, attempt his own act of homage in two separate works: the Violin Sonata and the ‘Trois Chansons de Federico García Lorca’. This exposition attempts to unfold aspects of the two men’s aesthetic pre-occupations and to show how the parallels uncovered cast reciprocal light upon their respective approaches to the creative process. It also examines the network of enfolded associations, musical and autobiographical, which link Poulenc’s two compositions commemorating Lorca, not only to one another but also to a wider circle of the composer’s works, especially his cycle setting poems of Guillaume Apollinaire: ‘Calligrammes’. Composed a year after the ‘Trois Chansons de Federico García Lorca’, this intricately wrought collection of seven mélodies, which Poulenc saw as the culmination of an intensive phase in his activity in this genre, revisits some of ‘unheard voices’ and ‘unseen shadows’ enfolded in its predecessor. It may be viewed, in part, as an attempt to bring to fuller resolution the veiled but keenly-felt anguish invoked by these paradoxical properties.
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Commonwealth Bank - Head Office cnr Pitt Street & Martin Place - Commemorative shields on facade (plate 655). Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-000933.

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Perth - New premises opening ceremony - E C Riddle (Governor) setting second commemorative tablet - 22 March 1933. Reserve Bank of Australia, September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-000427.

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Head Office - Construction of new premises - Commemorative plaques for HO in process of construction (copy b). Reserve Bank of Australia, September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-000698.

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Commonwealth Bank - Head Office cnr Pitt Street & Martin Place - Commemorative shields on facade - 1916 (plate 653). Reserve Bank of Australia, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-000935.

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