2018
DOI: 10.1177/1750698017749978
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Reflexivity or orientation? Collective memories in the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand national press

Abstract: With regard to the notion of 'national reflexivity', an important part of Beck's cosmopolitan outlook, this article examines how, and, in what ways, collective memories of empire were reflexively used in Australian, Canadian and New Zealand national newspaper coverage of the 2012 Diamond Jubilee and London Olympic Games. In contrast to Beck, it is argued that examples of national reflexivity were closely tied to the history of the nation-state, with collective memories of the former British Empire used to deba… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…As noted by Wark (2017), this is not a simple reinsertion of the subjectobject relationship, but rather, a consideration of the ways in which nature and society are interdependently conceived to the point that such distinctions can be upheld and dissolved through embodied actions that orientate individuals' perception of where nature begins and ends. It is these practices and actions (Macnaghten and Urry 1998)processes of orientation (Black 2018) -that are performed through levels of praxis (taskscape/non-taskscape, interpassive and dark) and which serve to locate 'our' orientation to nature.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As noted by Wark (2017), this is not a simple reinsertion of the subjectobject relationship, but rather, a consideration of the ways in which nature and society are interdependently conceived to the point that such distinctions can be upheld and dissolved through embodied actions that orientate individuals' perception of where nature begins and ends. It is these practices and actions (Macnaghten and Urry 1998)processes of orientation (Black 2018) -that are performed through levels of praxis (taskscape/non-taskscape, interpassive and dark) and which serve to locate 'our' orientation to nature.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the chapters in this collection -from both Indigenous and non-Indigenous authors -are a range of approaches to grappling with these relationships. This book joins an international conversation about the politics of memory and commemoration in other settler-colonial countries including Canada, New Zealand and North America (Black, 2020;Caldwell & Leroux, 2019;Chazan & Cole, 2020;Manning, 2018;O'Malley & Kidman, 2018;Rosenberg et al, 2010).…”
Section: Memory Scale and Voicementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Rather, traveling memory in political rhetoric is an actively strategic practice. Since collective memory is typically constructed and reconstructed to strengthen notions that are oriented toward the nation (Black, 2020; Hobsbawm and Ranger, 1983; Olick, 2016), when turning to the past in political speech, it is mostly to historical national events that are constructed and reconstructed as the dominating version of national collective memory (see e.g. Wodak et al, 1999), or memory “from above” (Sierp, 2014: 30).…”
Section: How the Past Is Politically Employed In A Globalized Agementioning
confidence: 99%