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On
Line Resources:
Toowoomba's
Literary History
Please follow the links below to find out
more...
Public
Memory Home
About
Public Memory

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a Journal of Rural Arts
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About
Public Memory
"Public
Memory is a body of beliefs and ideas about the past that help a public
or society understand both its past, present, and by implication, its
future."
John Bodnar
The
Public Memory Centre coordinates
a multi and trans-disciplinary group of researchers working across the
humanities from areas such as art, music, theatre, anthropology, history,
English, communications, cultural and gender studies, sociology and international
relations.
The
Public Memory centre investigates
the ways in which the past is utilized in contemporary culture. This investigation
is interested in:
The
representational forms and institutions which remember the past.
The processes by which the past is transmitted
to the present for consumption and exchange.
The ways in which contemporary public culture
invests in different versions of the past.
The reorganization of public memory through historical
rediscovery.
The influence of space, visual culture and the
built environment on public memory.
Myth, symbol, monument, ritual and the museum.
The location of the subject in memory.
Individual, social, and political memory.
Regional memories, cosmopolitanism and globalization.
Narrative, memory and history.
Alternative memories and the possibilities of
future.
Historical tourism and regional development.
New technologies of remembering.
Memory in popular and official culture.
This
site is an initiative of the Public Memory
Research
Centre at the University
of Southern Queensland and represents a collaboration between
researchers in the Creative arts, Music, Theatre,
English, Multimedia Studies, Anthropology, History and Communications disciplines.
Anyone
interested in contributing or participating in the Public Memory
Research Group should email either;
Dave
Boreham
or
Chris Lee
The Public
Memory project has been developed as a interdisciplinary collaboration
by the Faculty of Arts' Multimedia Studies Discipline Area at the University
of Southern Queensland 2004.
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