Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics

One problem that plagues war monuments established by nation-states seems to be the exclusivity and contentiousness of their messages; as war monuments commemorate the greatness of the nation despite war’s extremes, other collectivities seemingly find themselves unable to ascribe to the monument’s s...

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Main Author: Bañez, Darryl Lance
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2019
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/372
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.theses-dissertations-14982021-09-27T03:00:04Z Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics Bañez, Darryl Lance One problem that plagues war monuments established by nation-states seems to be the exclusivity and contentiousness of their messages; as war monuments commemorate the greatness of the nation despite war’s extremes, other collectivities seemingly find themselves unable to ascribe to the monument’s significations. In addition, glorious narratives ignore the destructive and unnecessary character of war. Meanwhile, monuments themselves battle obsolescence through a realigning and balancing of their significations to the present sociopolitical context. Given a Second World War monument, Corregidor; and cosmopolitanism, a political and ethical theory that puts humanity at the center of its affairs, this thesis interrogates how the said monument bears cosmopolitical motifs – arguments which highlight the need for humanity to realize community regardless of creed, nationality, or any other affiliations. Through a content analysis of the island’s sites and an interview with its site caretakers, augmented by archival research, this thesis argues that the island’s many sites were imbued with cosmopolitan and cosmopolitical motifs from the start. Furthermore, Corregidor also demonstrates that the focus on the cosmopolitan does not necessarily threaten nation-state legitimacy, since its own values are aligned with the global commitment to the preservation of peace and democracy. Despite these, these sites and their messages only go as far as to proclaim the values that would inform a cosmopolitan world; the acts needed to realize such come, as always, from humanity. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/372 Theses and Dissertations (All) Archīum Ateneo
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
description One problem that plagues war monuments established by nation-states seems to be the exclusivity and contentiousness of their messages; as war monuments commemorate the greatness of the nation despite war’s extremes, other collectivities seemingly find themselves unable to ascribe to the monument’s significations. In addition, glorious narratives ignore the destructive and unnecessary character of war. Meanwhile, monuments themselves battle obsolescence through a realigning and balancing of their significations to the present sociopolitical context. Given a Second World War monument, Corregidor; and cosmopolitanism, a political and ethical theory that puts humanity at the center of its affairs, this thesis interrogates how the said monument bears cosmopolitical motifs – arguments which highlight the need for humanity to realize community regardless of creed, nationality, or any other affiliations. Through a content analysis of the island’s sites and an interview with its site caretakers, augmented by archival research, this thesis argues that the island’s many sites were imbued with cosmopolitan and cosmopolitical motifs from the start. Furthermore, Corregidor also demonstrates that the focus on the cosmopolitan does not necessarily threaten nation-state legitimacy, since its own values are aligned with the global commitment to the preservation of peace and democracy. Despite these, these sites and their messages only go as far as to proclaim the values that would inform a cosmopolitan world; the acts needed to realize such come, as always, from humanity.
format text
author Bañez, Darryl Lance
spellingShingle Bañez, Darryl Lance
Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics
author_facet Bañez, Darryl Lance
author_sort Bañez, Darryl Lance
title Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics
title_short Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics
title_full Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics
title_fullStr Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics
title_full_unstemmed Cosmopolitanism in Corregidor: Second World War Monuments as Sites of Memory For Cosmopolitan Politics
title_sort cosmopolitanism in corregidor: second world war monuments as sites of memory for cosmopolitan politics
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2019
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/372
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