© 2015 Nicholas John CoyneThe First World War (1914-1918) had complicated implications for the people in the city of Melbourne. The conflict has predominantly been described as Australia's first national engagement or awakening, yet this thesis argues that, the ways in which the majority of people on the home-front experienced the conflict was in the contexts of their local communities, and for many, in their city. In participating in the conflict, the people of Melbourne performed varying roles in the war within different emotional communities. Performative methodologies will be used to explore how messages were manifested in the control of public spaces in the city, in displays of authority, and in expressions of citizenship and gender
World War I had a devastating effect on Australian society. Why should we commemorate our participat...
World War I had a devastating effect on Australian society. Why should we commemorate our participat...
This book explores an Australian regional community’s reaction to, and involvement with, the Boer Wa...
This dissertation is concerned with the relationship between the experience of total war and early t...
This thesis examines the theatricality which accompanied the establishment, development and deployme...
© 2018 Dr. Xavier James FowlerThis thesis investigates sport and its relationship with the Australia...
© 2013 Dr. Carolyn Anne HolbrookThis thesis traces the history of the Great War in the Australian im...
© 2019 Rhys Morgan CooperThis thesis examines how Australian heroism was defined and represented dur...
This thesis examines the experiences and attitudes of civilians in Essex during the First World War,...
This thesis is a study of aspects of social and political history during 1914 to 1917 which shaped ...
This book contributes to the global turn in First World War studies by exploring Australians' engage...
This thesis examines the experiences and attitudes of civilians in Essex during the First World War,...
Australia's first ANZAC Day commemoration in April 1916 has attracted the attention of a number of h...
This article examines the Great War in Victoria through the lens of private sentiment. It exposes no...
By the time of the Armstice, Villers-Bretonneux - once a lively and flourishing French town - had be...
World War I had a devastating effect on Australian society. Why should we commemorate our participat...
World War I had a devastating effect on Australian society. Why should we commemorate our participat...
This book explores an Australian regional community’s reaction to, and involvement with, the Boer Wa...
This dissertation is concerned with the relationship between the experience of total war and early t...
This thesis examines the theatricality which accompanied the establishment, development and deployme...
© 2018 Dr. Xavier James FowlerThis thesis investigates sport and its relationship with the Australia...
© 2013 Dr. Carolyn Anne HolbrookThis thesis traces the history of the Great War in the Australian im...
© 2019 Rhys Morgan CooperThis thesis examines how Australian heroism was defined and represented dur...
This thesis examines the experiences and attitudes of civilians in Essex during the First World War,...
This thesis is a study of aspects of social and political history during 1914 to 1917 which shaped ...
This book contributes to the global turn in First World War studies by exploring Australians' engage...
This thesis examines the experiences and attitudes of civilians in Essex during the First World War,...
Australia's first ANZAC Day commemoration in April 1916 has attracted the attention of a number of h...
This article examines the Great War in Victoria through the lens of private sentiment. It exposes no...
By the time of the Armstice, Villers-Bretonneux - once a lively and flourishing French town - had be...
World War I had a devastating effect on Australian society. Why should we commemorate our participat...
World War I had a devastating effect on Australian society. Why should we commemorate our participat...
This book explores an Australian regional community’s reaction to, and involvement with, the Boer Wa...