2. HISTORICAL REENACTMENT: ROMANTIC AMNESIA OR COUNTER-MEMORY?

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 320
Author(s):  
Darío Español-Solana ◽  
Jesús Gerardo Franco-Calvo

Historical reenactment is becoming a top-tier teaching tool in the countries of Southern Europe. In Spain specifically, this discipline is experiencing a boom as a heritage education method, particularly in informal settings. This article is the outcome of a qualitative research study of the results obtained from one hundred and fifteen educators from historical reenactment groups. The study analyses the methods used by the exponents of this discipline to teach war in the Middle Ages, specifically in three Spanish castles dating from the 11th to the 12th centuries. It has made it possible to analyse how the educational discourses are organised in relation to Medieval war within military spaces from this period, and how historical reenactment is a coadjutant in the construction of teaching/learning spaces from a heritage education perspective.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
pp. 119-140
Author(s):  
Jay Winter

AbstractThis paper analyses the phenomenon of historical reenactment of Great War battles as an effort to create what is termed ‘living history’. Thousands of people all over the world have participated in such reenactments, and their number increased significantly during the period surrounding the centenary of the outbreak of the Great War. Through a comparison with representations of war in historical writing, in museums and in the performing arts, I examine the claim of reenactors that they can enter into historical experience. I criticise this claim, and show how distant it is from those who do not claim to relive history but (more modestly) to represent it. In their search for ‘living history’, reenactors make two major errors. They strip war of its political content, and they sanitise and trivialise combat.


Author(s):  
Mike Goode

Goode explores how Scott’s “potent historical fictions,” their “historically resigned but elegiac narrative of the Jacobite rebellions,” are deployed by Jefferson Davis, former President of the Southern Confederacy, to make sense of the “noble lost cause” of the American Civil War. For Goode, Scott’s own narrative “revivification” is best understood as an “ontological project of historical reenactment,” one that not only found resonance with apologists of the vanquished Confederacy but that is literalized in the long-running fantasy spectacle of the “living history museum” at “colonial” Williamsburg, Virginia.


2016 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 344-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily Curtis Walters

AbstractDespite West End producers' and critics' expectations that it would never turn a profit, R. C. Sherriff's Journey's End (1928) became the most commercially successful First World stage drama of the interwar period, celebrated as an authentic depiction of the Great War in Britain and around the world. This article explains why. Departing from existing scholarship, which centers on Sherriff's autobiographical influences on his play, I focus instead on the marketing and reception of this production. Several processes specific to the interwar era blurred the play's ontology as a commercial entertainment and catapulted it to international success. These include its conspicuous engagement with and endorsement by veterans of the war, which transformed the play into historical reenactment; the multisensory spectatorial encounter, which allowed audiences to approach Journey's End as a means of accessing vicarious knowledge about the war; and a marketing campaign that addressed anxieties about the British theatrical industry. Finally, I trace the reception of this play into the Second World War, when British soldiers and prisoners of war spontaneously revived it around the world. The afterlives of Journey's End, I demonstrate, suggest new ways of conceiving of the cultural legacy of the First World War across the generations.


Servis plus ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 80-86
Author(s):  
Алексей Батурин ◽  
Aleksey Baturin

The article analyzes the experience of the organization of event tourism and event management in the framework of the historical reconstruction in Spain. For consideration of the involved material of historical reenactment at Castillo Conde de Alfaz and Villajoyosa, which is part of the popular tourist centre of Spain. These tourist destinations are located in the area of Benidorm, attracting a large number of Spanish and foreign tourists, not only due to the unique natural conditions (combination of sea beaches, mountains and numerous cultural and commercial centre of Benidorm), but also due to the possibility to dive into one of the most striking historical eras of Spain – ​middle Ages, thanks to well-organized historical reconstruction. The article considers the main forms and methods of historical reconstruction, contributing to the successful promotion of tourism products. The material can serve as a guide for organizers of tourism and potential tourists interested in the history and culture of Spain.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document