This paper argues that British theatre-makers played an important role in recruiting men to the armed forces in 1914 and 1915. It identifies a progression from the use of extra-dramatic interventions in the first weeks of the war, to the blurring of boundaries between stage and auditorium, drawing on plays such as In Time of War, A Call to Arms and England Expects. It ends with an examination of the messages promulgated in these recruiting dramas. Examining a range of plays addressing both men’s reluctance to enlist, and women’s reluctance to let their men enlist, the paper argues that recruiting plays offered a far more sophisticated response to the experience of enlisting than has previously been recognized
Copyright © 2018 The Author. This article explores a key debate within the British Army of the powe...
Most Indian soldiers were volunteers who could not read or write before they were recruited by the B...
The British army's officer cadet colleges of the Royal Military Academy (RMA), Woolwich, and the Roy...
In August 1914 theatre managers were worried about the impact of the war on their businesses. Yet ra...
Maidstone was used as a training depot for thousands of volunteers and conscripts in the First World...
It has long been recognised that the theatre played an important role in mobilizing young men in the...
Theatre was an important aspect of the wartime experience for British servicemen in every arena of t...
At the start of World War I, Britain needed to raise an army. The government established the Parlia...
Casualties during the First World War were far higher than had been anticipated in pre-war planning....
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
We analyse four propaganda films designed to support women’s conscription into British arms producti...
Expansion of the British Army through Lord Kitchener’s New Armies has dominated the historiography o...
Historians have long taken an interest in military recruitment advertising and public relations. Mu...
Popular imagination holds that the volunteer army raised by Lord Kitchener in the opening weeks of t...
The Great War Theatre database xplores the story of theatre during the First World War and uncovers ...
Copyright © 2018 The Author. This article explores a key debate within the British Army of the powe...
Most Indian soldiers were volunteers who could not read or write before they were recruited by the B...
The British army's officer cadet colleges of the Royal Military Academy (RMA), Woolwich, and the Roy...
In August 1914 theatre managers were worried about the impact of the war on their businesses. Yet ra...
Maidstone was used as a training depot for thousands of volunteers and conscripts in the First World...
It has long been recognised that the theatre played an important role in mobilizing young men in the...
Theatre was an important aspect of the wartime experience for British servicemen in every arena of t...
At the start of World War I, Britain needed to raise an army. The government established the Parlia...
Casualties during the First World War were far higher than had been anticipated in pre-war planning....
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
We analyse four propaganda films designed to support women’s conscription into British arms producti...
Expansion of the British Army through Lord Kitchener’s New Armies has dominated the historiography o...
Historians have long taken an interest in military recruitment advertising and public relations. Mu...
Popular imagination holds that the volunteer army raised by Lord Kitchener in the opening weeks of t...
The Great War Theatre database xplores the story of theatre during the First World War and uncovers ...
Copyright © 2018 The Author. This article explores a key debate within the British Army of the powe...
Most Indian soldiers were volunteers who could not read or write before they were recruited by the B...
The British army's officer cadet colleges of the Royal Military Academy (RMA), Woolwich, and the Roy...