2018
DOI: 10.1080/02619288.2018.1471860
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Memory and Family in Australian Refugee Histories

Abstract: This special issue engages with histories of refugees and 'family' and their intersections with aspects of memory studies -including oral history, public storytelling, family history and museum exhibitions and objects. The impetus for this special issue arose out of a collection of papers presented at Professor Joy Damousi's ARC Laureate Fellowship conference, 'Global Histories of Refugees in the 20th and 21st Centuries' at the University of Melbourne in October 2016. The authors presented papers that engaged … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The collected data drawn on interviews and questionnaires clearly show that material elements play an important role in the process of remembering and shaping memories. When considering the historical intersections between family and mobility, it is important to contextualize different cultural practices of family and family life, which shape engagements with place and the retelling of these experiences across time [11]. If an individual memory is to be incorporated into the broader collective memory, there has to be a link to a specific event (e.g., a birth), religious holiday (e.g., a Bar or Bat Mitzvah), person (e.g., a Holocaust survivor), space (e.g., dining room) or subject (e.g., an image or a candelabra) [12].…”
Section: Do Materials Elements Shape Memoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The collected data drawn on interviews and questionnaires clearly show that material elements play an important role in the process of remembering and shaping memories. When considering the historical intersections between family and mobility, it is important to contextualize different cultural practices of family and family life, which shape engagements with place and the retelling of these experiences across time [11]. If an individual memory is to be incorporated into the broader collective memory, there has to be a link to a specific event (e.g., a birth), religious holiday (e.g., a Bar or Bat Mitzvah), person (e.g., a Holocaust survivor), space (e.g., dining room) or subject (e.g., an image or a candelabra) [12].…”
Section: Do Materials Elements Shape Memoriesmentioning
confidence: 99%