John MacCrae (1872-1918) enlisted in the Canadian Army Medical Corps as a physician in 1914. He was indirectly responsible for the decision by Commonwealth countries in 1921 to adopt the poppy as a symbol to commemorate the fallen of the Great War. He was buried in Wimereux, a small town in northern France. Starting from the example of Wimereux, we shall consider what remains of his life and memory. Can Wimereux be considered as a place of remembrance or a place of commemoration ? What traces remain today of his presence ? How long has MacCrae been commemorated and where is this tribute paid ? Who is really being honoured ? To what extent is Wimereux different from the other places devoted to his memory ? Considering the example of MacCrae ...
The article engages with the cultural impact of John McCrae’s canonical poem “In Flanders Fields” (1...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
Mis en ligne le 15 février 2019Located in the village of Mars-la-Tour in the department of Meurthe-e...
John MacCrae (1872-1918), engagé volontaire dans le corps d’armée canadien dès 1914, est à l’origine...
The Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is a 16.5-hectare (40 acres) tract of preserved battlegroun...
Following the Great War of 1914-1918 thousands of memorials were established across the world to jus...
Anniversary rituals commemorating WWI in the form of very symbolic red poppies developed in Great Br...
Peace on November 11, 1918 raised ambivalent feelings both in Belgium and in France. But the work of...
Canadian public memory of the Great War was initially fragmented, centered around specific locations...
After the First World War, families, local authorities and the whole nation wanted to pay homage to ...
A centenary effect is bringing the First World War back into the public sphere in France, even thoug...
This article considers the power of things to affect how the past is remembered in the aftermath of ...
The changes inscribed by a century of public interaction with local First World War memorials alter ...
The Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is a 16.5-hectare (40 acres) tract of preserved battlegroun...
An overview of the process and meaning behind the memorials to the fallen of the Great War erected a...
The article engages with the cultural impact of John McCrae’s canonical poem “In Flanders Fields” (1...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
Mis en ligne le 15 février 2019Located in the village of Mars-la-Tour in the department of Meurthe-e...
John MacCrae (1872-1918), engagé volontaire dans le corps d’armée canadien dès 1914, est à l’origine...
The Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is a 16.5-hectare (40 acres) tract of preserved battlegroun...
Following the Great War of 1914-1918 thousands of memorials were established across the world to jus...
Anniversary rituals commemorating WWI in the form of very symbolic red poppies developed in Great Br...
Peace on November 11, 1918 raised ambivalent feelings both in Belgium and in France. But the work of...
Canadian public memory of the Great War was initially fragmented, centered around specific locations...
After the First World War, families, local authorities and the whole nation wanted to pay homage to ...
A centenary effect is bringing the First World War back into the public sphere in France, even thoug...
This article considers the power of things to affect how the past is remembered in the aftermath of ...
The changes inscribed by a century of public interaction with local First World War memorials alter ...
The Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial is a 16.5-hectare (40 acres) tract of preserved battlegroun...
An overview of the process and meaning behind the memorials to the fallen of the Great War erected a...
The article engages with the cultural impact of John McCrae’s canonical poem “In Flanders Fields” (1...
It is commonly known that the First World War led to a flood of war memorials in the late 1910s and ...
Mis en ligne le 15 février 2019Located in the village of Mars-la-Tour in the department of Meurthe-e...