6533b85cfe1ef96bd12bc76f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

National days between commemoration and celebration: remembering 1947 and 1960 in Madagascar

Mareike SpäthHelihanta Rajaonarison

subject

Cultural StudiesPoliticsNational historyNoticeAnthropologyAnthropologySociologyAncient historySingingAltered state

description

Today Madagascar officially celebrates two national holidays. 29 March is dedicated to the memory of anticolonial resistance in 1947, the commemoration of the dead and the decoration of surviving combatants. 26 June in contrast is celebrated as Madagascar's return to independence in 1960 with parades, cultural performances, singing and dancing. But consecutive governments have altered state politics of commemoration and non-state actors have influenced the way in which 1947 and 1960 are remembered.This study of national days in Madagascar offers an interpretation of the different ways the two key events of national history have been remembered within the fifty years since Independence. Looking into complexities of commemorative practices we question the juxtaposition of commemorating sad events and celebrating joyful ones. Commemoration and celebration make up two poles of a continuum on which the valence memory-making can be placed. We notice that both ends are manifest in nationwide commemorative activi...

https://doi.org/10.1080/23323256.2013.11500042