This section of the course is run by Dr. Graham Smith and is entitled <B>Commemoration and Memorialisation</b>.<BR><BR><B>Week Five | Learning Outcomes</B><BR><BR>Over the course of this week you will gain a deeper insight and have an understanding of the following: <BR><BR><B>Knowledge and understanding</B><BR>To gain a better understanding of public history, including the use of the past in contemporary politics<BR>To develop understandings of memorials and memorialisation as an aspect of public history, including: (a) the use of the past, as well as the historical present, in memorialisation; and (b) The communication and non-communication of different versions of history through memorialisation<BR>To understand memorialisation in the contexts of time, place and space<BR><BR><B>Skills</B><BR>Apply a public history approach within historical study and discussion<BR>Identification and application of ideas to inform a case study<BR>Place the productions of public history in their historical contexts<BR>Reading a review article (Glassberg, 1991) and applying it to a different question (monuments, memorialisation and Magna Carta)<BR><BR><B>Attributes</b><BR>To develop an empathetic approach to people in the past<BR>Engage with peers constructively in online debates<BR><BR><B>Week Five | Before you watch the lectures</B> Before you start watching this week's lectures it would be useful for you to have an understanding of what the term 'memorialisation' means. Please follow <a href= "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memorialization">this memorialisation link</a> to gain a deeper understanding of the term.