Despite the importance of the production and supply of food during times of conflict, little scholarly attention has been paid to food in the everyday experience of soldiers and civilians, including children, during both World Wars. Drawing upon diaries, oral histories, material culture, and histories of the emotions, from an Australian perspective, this article traces how children and young people played a key role in the exchange of food and drink in wartime, including in cross-cultural interactions. This article leads to a richer understanding of the history and heritage of war in relation to Australian society
This lantern slide, “Australian YMCA at Corbie (August 1918),” shows Australian and British soldiers...
ii Food is an essential part of human existence and directly linked to the cultural behaviour of ind...
Australian readers consumed with great interest the fruits of the war books boom that began in Europ...
Despite the importance of the production and supply of food during times of conflict, little scholarl...
Important recent scholarship has highlighted the social, cultural, religious and emotional significa...
The history of children’s war play in Australia during and after the First World War remains largel...
© Oxbow Books Ltd and the Society for the Study of Childhood in the Past 2014. In 2010, the Leverhul...
This article gives analysis of food practices of children in Stalingrad during the War, based on an ...
Children have always played an important role in Australia’s Anzac story. They have carried the...
This article uses a diary kept by a First World War soldier, Vince Schürhoff, to explore the British...
The food Australians ate immediately prior to the 1950s has been popularly remembered in stark contr...
This exhibition explored the cultural lives of soldiers, a topic that permeated every aspect of sold...
© 2011 Dr. Alexandra Susan MacCallumAustralian historians have written about the Second World War. T...
In this article we use a module from the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes 2007 to analyse how p...
As a white settler society Australia is often presumed to have been disconnected from Asia and Asian...
This lantern slide, “Australian YMCA at Corbie (August 1918),” shows Australian and British soldiers...
ii Food is an essential part of human existence and directly linked to the cultural behaviour of ind...
Australian readers consumed with great interest the fruits of the war books boom that began in Europ...
Despite the importance of the production and supply of food during times of conflict, little scholarl...
Important recent scholarship has highlighted the social, cultural, religious and emotional significa...
The history of children’s war play in Australia during and after the First World War remains largel...
© Oxbow Books Ltd and the Society for the Study of Childhood in the Past 2014. In 2010, the Leverhul...
This article gives analysis of food practices of children in Stalingrad during the War, based on an ...
Children have always played an important role in Australia’s Anzac story. They have carried the...
This article uses a diary kept by a First World War soldier, Vince Schürhoff, to explore the British...
The food Australians ate immediately prior to the 1950s has been popularly remembered in stark contr...
This exhibition explored the cultural lives of soldiers, a topic that permeated every aspect of sold...
© 2011 Dr. Alexandra Susan MacCallumAustralian historians have written about the Second World War. T...
In this article we use a module from the Australian Survey of Social Attitudes 2007 to analyse how p...
As a white settler society Australia is often presumed to have been disconnected from Asia and Asian...
This lantern slide, “Australian YMCA at Corbie (August 1918),” shows Australian and British soldiers...
ii Food is an essential part of human existence and directly linked to the cultural behaviour of ind...
Australian readers consumed with great interest the fruits of the war books boom that began in Europ...