Foreign travel is commonly an accompaniment to war, but it tends to be seen - by commanders and historians though not always by the participants - as peripheral, incidental to the primary experience of battle. This article suggests, somewhat speculatively, that in the case of the Australians in the First World War, travel was more than fortuitous; that indeed one aspect of travel, a well-established tourist ethos, had a direct impact on the way the troops reacted to the face of battle.
1915 was a critical year for Australians, and not just because of the pride and myth-making associat...
The profile of five battles fought by Australians in the Great War (1914-1918) was traced over the p...
The Great War battlefield landscape of the Western Front still exerts an enormous potency for touris...
Historical tourism resources associated with diasporic communities and battlefields would at face va...
This paper analyses the militarisation of Australian history and culture thesis with specific refere...
For the members of the Second New Zealand Expeditionary Force (2NZEF) and, in particular, the Second...
Across the twentieth century, Britain drew more Australian tourists for longer and more intense expe...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1999 Bart ZiinoDebates over 'the' experience of Australi...
Rapidly growing numbers of Australian tourists visiting overseas battle sites associated with Austra...
Can a soldier be a tourist? Can we say that touristic experiences are possible during the war from t...
Warfare tourism’ represents an increasingly significant dimension of contemporary tourism. This pape...
In 1914, a little over a decade after federation in 1901, Australia followed the British Empire into...
This article compares responses to travel writing and imaginative fiction about the settler colonies...
It is amazing to see just how much travel writing, writmg which does not exclusively belong to this ...
Since 1885, when, at England\u27s beck and call, New South Wales sent troops to the Sudan, hardly a ...
1915 was a critical year for Australians, and not just because of the pride and myth-making associat...
The profile of five battles fought by Australians in the Great War (1914-1918) was traced over the p...
The Great War battlefield landscape of the Western Front still exerts an enormous potency for touris...
Historical tourism resources associated with diasporic communities and battlefields would at face va...
This paper analyses the militarisation of Australian history and culture thesis with specific refere...
For the members of the Second New Zealand Expeditionary Force (2NZEF) and, in particular, the Second...
Across the twentieth century, Britain drew more Australian tourists for longer and more intense expe...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 1999 Bart ZiinoDebates over 'the' experience of Australi...
Rapidly growing numbers of Australian tourists visiting overseas battle sites associated with Austra...
Can a soldier be a tourist? Can we say that touristic experiences are possible during the war from t...
Warfare tourism’ represents an increasingly significant dimension of contemporary tourism. This pape...
In 1914, a little over a decade after federation in 1901, Australia followed the British Empire into...
This article compares responses to travel writing and imaginative fiction about the settler colonies...
It is amazing to see just how much travel writing, writmg which does not exclusively belong to this ...
Since 1885, when, at England\u27s beck and call, New South Wales sent troops to the Sudan, hardly a ...
1915 was a critical year for Australians, and not just because of the pride and myth-making associat...
The profile of five battles fought by Australians in the Great War (1914-1918) was traced over the p...
The Great War battlefield landscape of the Western Front still exerts an enormous potency for touris...