Preserving Memory/Displacing Memory

A12 annual

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Abstract

Collective memory could not be preserved and passed on from one generation to the next generation were it not able to reside in physical objects of remembrance such as monuments, memorials, museums, archives and cemeteries. Communities often go to great lengths to create and maintain such sites of memory, a recognition of the understanding that our link with the past is through those physical memory sites that give permanence to memory. Memorial artefacts allow for the past to be represented and made meaningful in the present. Dominated by figurative representation until the mid-twentieth century, the typology of memorial design in the West has since this time been under challenge to respond to the uncertainties and discontinuities of the contemporary. This paper examines the historical shifts in the understanding of the agency of monuments and memorials, the material objects that are the means of transfer of cultural memory. The paper argues that contemporary approaches to memory sites, whether through preservation or through new interventions, is ultimately bound to the conflicting impulses of convention and invention inherent in the impulse to define new ways in which the past can be invoked and sustained meaningfully in built form.