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Comparing Criteria: Assessing the Significance of Memorials | Murray | Public History Review

Comparing Criteria: Assessing the Significance of Memorials

Lisa Murray

Abstract


This article focuses on the practicalities of assessing the cultural significance of memorials. It outlines the main criteria that are currently in use in New South Wales – The Burra Charter, the NSW Heritage Branch assessment criteria and the National Trust’s Heritage Values for Cemeteries – and considers which are the most appropriate to apply to memorials. In doing this it highlights the inadequacies of significance criteria in capturing the memorial process and contested memories that are often attached to memorials. The philosophical question of when a memorial becomes heritage is also considered; and whether the act of heritage listing is a form of memorialisation in itself. This article draws upon the work of the Cemeteries Committee, a conservation technical committee of the National Trust of Australia (NSW).

Keywords


Memorials; Cemeteries; Cultural Landscapes; Heritage Assessment Criteria; Cultural Significance

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