Data di Pubblicazione:
2021
Abstract:
Proposing a transnational and comparative approach, this contribution analyzes (especially
for Great Britain and Sardinian/Italian kingdom) how the public use of the memory of the
Crimean War was projected on the XIXth century society thanks to the mediatic and symbolic
involvement of the state, the army and the public opinion. The conflict had profound political
and memorial repercussions, with consequences on the side of cultural history, national
identities, collective imaginaries. New forms of patriotism were generated around the memory
of the war; in particular, overcoming the traditional celebration of national heroes, practiced
but weakened in the course of the conflict, the politics of memory saw – especially in Great
Britain and Russia – the spread of a true cult for the suffering and sacrifice of ordinary soldiers
(of whom the first associations of veterans were the guardians), accompanied by attempts at
army reforms. The uniqueness of the conflict lay in the updated interpretation of the codes of
honor and in the political reinterpretation of military defeats into founding events of the modern
nation (the Charge of the Light Brigade, the resistance of Sevastopol, the human price paid
by armies to epidemics) that forged new languages and representations of national identities
together with the recognition of non-elite subjects as worthy of commendation and collective
tribute.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Guerra di Crimea, Crimean War, Sebastopoli, Sebastopol, Società di Reduci, Veterans’ Associations
Elenco autori:
Silvia Cavicchioli
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