War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives

Essentialist understandings of ethnicity and nationhood suggest that ethnic or national identities are set in stone and hence immutable, but we argue that they are continuously developed into existence through past and present narratives, as they are articulated through historical accounts, national...

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Main Authors: Lily Hamourtziadou, Przemyslaw Lukasik, Khatuna Chapichadze
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Pluto Journals 2025-05-01
Series:Journal of Global Faultlines
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/jglobfaul.12.1.0003
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author Lily Hamourtziadou
Przemyslaw Lukasik
Khatuna Chapichadze
author_facet Lily Hamourtziadou
Przemyslaw Lukasik
Khatuna Chapichadze
author_sort Lily Hamourtziadou
collection DOAJ
description Essentialist understandings of ethnicity and nationhood suggest that ethnic or national identities are set in stone and hence immutable, but we argue that they are continuously developed into existence through past and present narratives, as they are articulated through historical accounts, national myths, and stories of the dead. The most emotionally powerful symbols of historical memory supporting such narratives are war memorials and museums, where the nation’s dead are remembered. We explore the ways in which human war casualties are remembered – and not remembered – through the study of memorials and museums in three different national contexts: in Georgia, in Poland, and in Great Britain.
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issn 2397-7825
2054-2089
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publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher Pluto Journals
record_format Article
series Journal of Global Faultlines
spelling doaj-art-7ea664c5c60e417e9ca6782ae7f0289a2025-08-20T02:40:28ZengPluto JournalsJournal of Global Faultlines2397-78252054-20892025-05-01121234210.13169/jglobfaul.12.1.0003War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectivesLily HamourtziadouPrzemyslaw LukasikKhatuna ChapichadzeEssentialist understandings of ethnicity and nationhood suggest that ethnic or national identities are set in stone and hence immutable, but we argue that they are continuously developed into existence through past and present narratives, as they are articulated through historical accounts, national myths, and stories of the dead. The most emotionally powerful symbols of historical memory supporting such narratives are war memorials and museums, where the nation’s dead are remembered. We explore the ways in which human war casualties are remembered – and not remembered – through the study of memorials and museums in three different national contexts: in Georgia, in Poland, and in Great Britain.https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/jglobfaul.12.1.0003
spellingShingle Lily Hamourtziadou
Przemyslaw Lukasik
Khatuna Chapichadze
War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives
Journal of Global Faultlines
title War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives
title_full War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives
title_fullStr War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives
title_full_unstemmed War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives
title_short War and national memory: Georgian, Polish, and British perspectives
title_sort war and national memory georgian polish and british perspectives
url https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.13169/jglobfaul.12.1.0003
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AT przemyslawlukasik warandnationalmemorygeorgianpolishandbritishperspectives
AT khatunachapichadze warandnationalmemorygeorgianpolishandbritishperspectives