This article explores the national identities that were constructed in Britain in and around memorial activity in the aftermath of the Great War, and attempts to set them in context. It is argued that the same memorial acts could suggest identities that were both international in their vision and also narrowly national. Indeed, the tensions evident in the discourse of identity embodied in memorial activity indicate that the idea of the nation itself was contested. That the same soldiers could have died for Britain, the Empire, Europe and England acts as a practical case study of the shifting and chimerical nature of national identity in modern Britain
This article seeks to explore the controversy surrounding the Scottish National War Memorial. It ana...
Foregrounding questions of belonging and national identity this chapter examines the role of the art...
The article analyzes how during the XIX century British war graves became a state duty, and the care...
The 1917 call for a national memorial to the First World War led to the establishment of the Imperia...
As the centenaries of the events of the Great War are commemorated in Britain, a wave of new memoria...
In the context of the centenary commemorations, the chapter discusses the influence of the First Wor...
Taking its cue from a phrase in a wartime sermon by the Bishop of London, Arthur Winnington-Ingram, ...
Prime Minister David Cameron has called for ‘a truly national commemoration of the First World War’....
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
The need to create memorials that had relevance to the bereaved yet located the Great War as an hist...
The Australian National War Memorial was designed by Edwin Lutyens and raised in 1938 on the site of...
The city of Bristol was one of the last major cities in Great Britain to unveil a civic memorial to ...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to restore the history of internationalism to our understandin...
The changes inscribed by a century of public interaction with local First World War memorials alter ...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
This article seeks to explore the controversy surrounding the Scottish National War Memorial. It ana...
Foregrounding questions of belonging and national identity this chapter examines the role of the art...
The article analyzes how during the XIX century British war graves became a state duty, and the care...
The 1917 call for a national memorial to the First World War led to the establishment of the Imperia...
As the centenaries of the events of the Great War are commemorated in Britain, a wave of new memoria...
In the context of the centenary commemorations, the chapter discusses the influence of the First Wor...
Taking its cue from a phrase in a wartime sermon by the Bishop of London, Arthur Winnington-Ingram, ...
Prime Minister David Cameron has called for ‘a truly national commemoration of the First World War’....
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
The need to create memorials that had relevance to the bereaved yet located the Great War as an hist...
The Australian National War Memorial was designed by Edwin Lutyens and raised in 1938 on the site of...
The city of Bristol was one of the last major cities in Great Britain to unveil a civic memorial to ...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to restore the history of internationalism to our understandin...
The changes inscribed by a century of public interaction with local First World War memorials alter ...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
This article seeks to explore the controversy surrounding the Scottish National War Memorial. It ana...
Foregrounding questions of belonging and national identity this chapter examines the role of the art...
The article analyzes how during the XIX century British war graves became a state duty, and the care...