This article examines the processes of remembering and transmitting experiences of the Great War within families of Australian veterans now passed on. It focuses on a recent boom in private publishing of ancestors’ personal letters and diaries and argues that these practices continue to reimagine and reshape family memories of the war. In so doing it exposes the range of family members implicated in family remembrance then and now, and so complicates any process by which a war almost beyond living memory is to become entirely understood by its public myths and representations.<br /
The article is focused on the perception of family and family relationship by the veterans of the Gr...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
Remembering the First World War brings together a group of international scholars to understand how ...
This article traces the legacies of the First World War across the twentieth century and three gener...
© 2013 Dr. Carolyn Anne HolbrookThis thesis traces the history of the Great War in the Australian im...
Children have always played an important role in Australia’s Anzac story. They have carried the...
Academic interest in Australia’s heritage field has developed primarily around the ways its subject ...
Since the Archives Act of 1983 Australia's Second World War internees have had access to their warti...
In this article we use a module from the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes 2007 to analyse how p...
International audienceIn preparing for the Centenary of the First World War, the Australian governme...
The twenty-seven original contributions to this volume investigate the ways in which the First World...
Before the First World War most Australians shared the emotions and traditions of the British Empire...
There has been an extraordinary resurgence in the commemoration of Australians at war in recent deca...
For the last two years, Australia has commemorated, on the first Wednesday in September, the ‘Battle...
This article explores the use of memory and material culture in the history of families who travelle...
The article is focused on the perception of family and family relationship by the veterans of the Gr...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
Remembering the First World War brings together a group of international scholars to understand how ...
This article traces the legacies of the First World War across the twentieth century and three gener...
© 2013 Dr. Carolyn Anne HolbrookThis thesis traces the history of the Great War in the Australian im...
Children have always played an important role in Australia’s Anzac story. They have carried the...
Academic interest in Australia’s heritage field has developed primarily around the ways its subject ...
Since the Archives Act of 1983 Australia's Second World War internees have had access to their warti...
In this article we use a module from the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes 2007 to analyse how p...
International audienceIn preparing for the Centenary of the First World War, the Australian governme...
The twenty-seven original contributions to this volume investigate the ways in which the First World...
Before the First World War most Australians shared the emotions and traditions of the British Empire...
There has been an extraordinary resurgence in the commemoration of Australians at war in recent deca...
For the last two years, Australia has commemorated, on the first Wednesday in September, the ‘Battle...
This article explores the use of memory and material culture in the history of families who travelle...
The article is focused on the perception of family and family relationship by the veterans of the Gr...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
Remembering the First World War brings together a group of international scholars to understand how ...