This article discusses the popularity of fighting doughboy (World War One infantrymen) sculptures in the United States in the context of 1920s American culture and visual culture
American soldiers used the scale and scope of their needs for leisure and recreation during World Wa...
Abstract: Scholarship in recent decades focusing on soldier experiences of the First World War have ...
International audienceThis article seeks to illustrate Benedict Anderson’s theory of the “Reassuranc...
Redressing the neglect of World War I memorials in art history scholarship and memory studies, Sculp...
Well before the conclusion of World War I, Americans were engaged in finding ways to honor and remem...
Bellion, WendyThis dissertation examines the development of the citizen soldier monument: the profus...
Dated ca. 1930-1939, this photograph shows a World War I monument, topped with a Doughboy soldier ho...
This black and white sixteen page document features an article from Kansas History: A journal of the...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of HistoryMark ParilloWar occupies an important place in the collecti...
Most people pass war memorials in their own town or while on the road with relatively little thought...
Lindenwood College alumni magazine.https://digitalcommons.lindenwood.edu/alumni_bulletin/1455/thumbn...
The need to create memorials that had relevance to the bereaved yet located the Great War as an hist...
This article considers Sir William Orpen’s controversial painting To the Unknown British Soldier in ...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
The period between the Civil War and World War I was the first great age of public art in the United...
American soldiers used the scale and scope of their needs for leisure and recreation during World Wa...
Abstract: Scholarship in recent decades focusing on soldier experiences of the First World War have ...
International audienceThis article seeks to illustrate Benedict Anderson’s theory of the “Reassuranc...
Redressing the neglect of World War I memorials in art history scholarship and memory studies, Sculp...
Well before the conclusion of World War I, Americans were engaged in finding ways to honor and remem...
Bellion, WendyThis dissertation examines the development of the citizen soldier monument: the profus...
Dated ca. 1930-1939, this photograph shows a World War I monument, topped with a Doughboy soldier ho...
This black and white sixteen page document features an article from Kansas History: A journal of the...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of HistoryMark ParilloWar occupies an important place in the collecti...
Most people pass war memorials in their own town or while on the road with relatively little thought...
Lindenwood College alumni magazine.https://digitalcommons.lindenwood.edu/alumni_bulletin/1455/thumbn...
The need to create memorials that had relevance to the bereaved yet located the Great War as an hist...
This article considers Sir William Orpen’s controversial painting To the Unknown British Soldier in ...
This article reviews the course and development of British planning to commemorate the First World W...
The period between the Civil War and World War I was the first great age of public art in the United...
American soldiers used the scale and scope of their needs for leisure and recreation during World Wa...
Abstract: Scholarship in recent decades focusing on soldier experiences of the First World War have ...
International audienceThis article seeks to illustrate Benedict Anderson’s theory of the “Reassuranc...