This study explores the development of the postwar memory - or lack of it - of the British war effort in the Balkans during the First World War. Focusing firstly on public memory, it examines the reasons that led to the exclusion of the British Balkan front experience from the popular memories of the war. These reasons have to do with the images and notions that dominated the myth of the war in relation to the conditions of warfare, the level of sacrifice, and the methods of political engagement on the British and Entente side, all of which would be seriously challenged by the inclusion of the memory of the Balkan front. The chapter then moves to the study of private memory and the way in which the ‘Salonika front' veterans saw the relation...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
While recent studies have revealed that the rate of memorials appears to be increasing in tandem wit...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
The author aims to discuss three topics using the memory research method. The first part discusses c...
This article explores the way in which the First World War continued to speak into (West) German cul...
The differences of memory cultures between the Europe’s East and West are partly an effect of striki...
Between the years 1991-1995, three wars were fought on the territory of former Yugoslavia, which led...
Remembering the First World War brings together a group of international scholars to understand how ...
One of the often-overlooked legacies of the First World War is how the conflict established the medi...
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
Anniversary rituals commemorating WWI in the form of very symbolic red poppies developed in Great Br...
This article complements an identified ‘cultural turn’ in military history, which emphasizes the pot...
The memory of the Western Front still seems to haunt British society nearly 90 years after the Armis...
Criticism on Great War memorialisation typically argues one of two things: that monuments were erect...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
While recent studies have revealed that the rate of memorials appears to be increasing in tandem wit...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
The author aims to discuss three topics using the memory research method. The first part discusses c...
This article explores the way in which the First World War continued to speak into (West) German cul...
The differences of memory cultures between the Europe’s East and West are partly an effect of striki...
Between the years 1991-1995, three wars were fought on the territory of former Yugoslavia, which led...
Remembering the First World War brings together a group of international scholars to understand how ...
One of the often-overlooked legacies of the First World War is how the conflict established the medi...
This article examines public participation in First World War centenary events in Britain between 20...
Anniversary rituals commemorating WWI in the form of very symbolic red poppies developed in Great Br...
This article complements an identified ‘cultural turn’ in military history, which emphasizes the pot...
The memory of the Western Front still seems to haunt British society nearly 90 years after the Armis...
Criticism on Great War memorialisation typically argues one of two things: that monuments were erect...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
While recent studies have revealed that the rate of memorials appears to be increasing in tandem wit...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in thi...