Labour and the Commemorative Landscape in Industrial Cape Breton, 1922-2013

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Labour and the Commemorative Landscape in Industrial Cape Breton, 1922-2013
Abstract
Labour landmarks are monuments, memorials, plaques and other sites that commemorate the past experiences of workers in society. These sites are also manifestations of the collective memory of labourers. In industrial Cape Breton, which has a long history of labour and class struggle, an analytical survey of labour landmarks reveals how the industrial past has been remembered and memorialized. This overview reflects the narratives that have been attached to these sites, the ways in which historical memory has been localized and constructed in industrial Cape Breton, and the new layers of meaning that are revealed as these communities transition into post-industrialism.
Publication
Material Culture Review
Volume
77/78, Spring/Autumn
Pages
56-75
Date
2013
Language
English
ISSN
1927-9264
Accessed
8/18/24, 3:03 AM
Rights
Copyright (c) 2015 Material Culture Review / Revue de la culture matérielle
Citation
MacKinnon, L. (2013). Labour and the Commemorative Landscape in Industrial Cape Breton, 1922-2013. Material Culture Review, 77/78, Spring/Autumn, 56–75. https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/MCR/article/view/22083