Home > Lectures > Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning (Guest Lecture by Jay Winters)

Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning (Guest Lecture by Jay Winters)

By John Merriman - Yale
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Lecture Description

As a result of World War I, Europe had a different understanding of war in the twentieth century than the United States. One of the most important ways in which the First World War was experienced on the continent and in Britain was through commemoration. By means of both mass-media technologies and older memorial forms, sites of memory offered opportunities for personal as well as political reconciliation with the unprecedented consequences of the war. The influence of these sites is still felt today, in a united Europe, as the importance of armies has diminished in favor of social welfare programs.

Course Description

Course Index

  1. Introduction to European Civilization
  2. Absolutism and the State
  3. Dutch and British Exceptionalism
  4. Peter the Great
  5. The Enlightenment and the Public Sphere
  6. Maximilien Robespierre and the French Revolution
  7. Napoleon
  8. Industrial Revolutions
  9. Middle Classes
  10. Why No Revolution in 1848 in Britain
  11. Nineteenth-Century Cities
  12. Nationalism
  13. Radicals
  14. Imperialists and Boy Scouts
  15. The Coming of the Great War
  16. War in the Trenches
  17. Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning (Guest Lecture by Jay Winters)
  18. The Romanovs and the Russian Revolution
  19. Successor States of Eastern Europe
  20. Stalinism
  21. Fascists
  22. Collaboration and Resistance in World War II
  23. The Collapse of Communism and Global Challenges