Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation

Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation is a Mellon-Sawyer Seminar Series running in 2017-18. It will bring together academics from many different fields, politicians, people who have played a role in peace negotiations and leading figures from cultural policy and the charitable sector. They will be joined by novelists, poets, artists and musicians whose work has marked war in some way.
Featured speakers include author Aminatta Forna, architect Daniel Libeskind and composer Jonathan Dove. View the full programme here.
The broad questions to be explored in the Series include:
• Who is commemoration for and why?
• How does commemoration lead to reconstruction and reconciliation?
• What is the future of commemoration?
The Series is divided into three strands: Textual Commemoration (October - December 2017), Monumental Commemoration (January - March 2018) and Aural Commemoration (April - June 2018). Each strand will be launched by an ‘In Conversation’ event featuring an internationally-renowned figure from the arts. These launch events will be followed by two panel-led workshops each term. There will also be three events aimed directly at post-graduates: a training day in object-based research methods, a postgraduate forum and a one-day conference.
The Series is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in memory of John E. Sawyer.
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Read the final report from the series via the link below:
*Image credit to Rafael Rodrigues Camargo
Contact:
Convenor:
Kate McLoughlin
kate.mcloughlin@ell.ox.ac.uk
Convenor:
Niall Munro
niall.munro@brookes.ac.uk
Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation

Memoir and Memory (October 2017)
Poetry and Life-Writing: Panel-Led Workshop 1 (October 2017)
Focusing on the role of poetry and life-writing in post-war healing, the workshop brought together experts working at the intersection of literature, human rights, foreign policy and peace initiatives.
Conflict and Community: Panel-Led Workshop 2 (November 2017)
A workshop was held to explore the special commemorative needs that arise in the wake of civil war and terrorism.
Memorable Objects: Postgraduate Training Day (November 2017)
This day brought together postgraduates in the humanities and social sciences to assist with their research, using the Pitt Rivers Museum collection of memorial artefacts from around the world as well as a team experienced in training scholars in object-handling.
Daniel Libeskind (February 2018)
Architect and designer Daniel Libeskind gave a talk as part of Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation.
Libeskind’s work is deeply connected to memory. In this talk he shared his creative process and thinking for many of his most prominent buildings including the Jewish Museum Berlin, Military History Museum in Dresden as well as recent Holocaust memorials in Canada and the Netherlands.
Museums and National Identity: Panel-Led Workshop 1 (February 2018)
The workshop explored the role of museums and memorial sites, drawing cross-cultural comparisons and investigating the relationship between post-war commemoration and national identity.
The workshop explored the significance of plastic commemoration, both sacred and secular, looking at places of worship, funerary sites and sculpture, and memorial monuments to investigate the interactions between space, place, object and memory.
Postgraduate Forum (March 2018)
A forum was held featuring brief presentations by postgraduate students from across the disciplines relating to the series.
Music and Memory: Jonathan Dove (April 2018)
Post-War: Remembrance, Recollection, Reconciliation (May 2018)
A one-day interdisciplinary conference was held which was the culmination of the Mellon-Sawyer Seminar Series Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation. Over the course of the 2017-18 academic year, the Series brought together academics, creative practitioners, field-workers and policy-makers to explore textual, monumental and aural commemoration and its role in reconciliation and peace-building. Postgraduate students and early career researchers from all disciplines were invited to share their original research.
Keynote Speaker: Professor Marita Sturken (Professor of Media, Culture and Communication, New York University)
Remembrance – Concert (June 2018)
A concert was held to form the conclusion of the year-long international seminar series Post-War: Commemoration, Reconstruction, Reconciliation.
Simon Over conductor
Annabel Drummond violin
Anna Leese soprano
Jon Stainsby baritone
City Choir Dunedin (New Zealand)
The Parliament Choir
Southbank Sinfonia
Vaughan Williams The Lark Ascending
Augusta Holmès La Nuit et L’Amour
Ravel Le Tombeau de Couperin
Interval
Anthony Ritchie Gallipoli to the Somme (European premiere)