If, having passed through the long courtyard where the walls are inscribed with the names of thousands of Australian war dead, you enter the inner sanctum of the Australian War Memorial, the Hall of Memory (quietly, as you have been asked to preserve the hush appropriate to a chapel), you will see first the towering six- metre bronze infantryman occupying the place of the altar. If you have read Ken Inglis on the subject of memorials, you may observe this figure critically, because you know that his position was once to have been occupied by a personified Australia in female form. Turning, and looking up and around, you see the three large stained-glass windows with their fifteen panels, each representing a figure in a uniform of the 1914-1...
The decade after the end of the Great War saw many disagreements taking place as to how the war shou...
On Anzac Day, a day when many of my colleagues will be writing about the crucial issue of the place ...
Discourses of war are disseminated and legitimised not only through speeches and written texts, but ...
If, having passed through the long courtyard where the walls are inscribed with the names of thousan...
In the one hundred years since the Great War, Australia's war memorial landscape has been dominated ...
This article contests the misconception that the Hall of Memory of the Australian War Memorial, Canb...
© 2016 Jason SmeatonWar and the military were traditionally perceived as masculine domains, but duri...
This article analyses The Maryborough War Memorial (1922) as an example of how one Queensland commun...
My work seeks to understand the origins of national identity as it pertains to the Anzacs of Austral...
[Excerpt] The Australian War Memorial (hereafter Memorial) has a large collection of canvases of the...
Once again, Journal of Australian Studies offers an eclectic interdisciplinary mix of current resear...
This thesis explores the extent to which Indigenous Australian and Māori First World War service has...
At the end of the First World War most people’s thoughts turned to putting the war behind them, but ...
This paper examined how the commemoration of the Australian Army Nursing Service undertaken in the w...
Throughout history women have shown a willingness to participate actively in the defence of their co...
The decade after the end of the Great War saw many disagreements taking place as to how the war shou...
On Anzac Day, a day when many of my colleagues will be writing about the crucial issue of the place ...
Discourses of war are disseminated and legitimised not only through speeches and written texts, but ...
If, having passed through the long courtyard where the walls are inscribed with the names of thousan...
In the one hundred years since the Great War, Australia's war memorial landscape has been dominated ...
This article contests the misconception that the Hall of Memory of the Australian War Memorial, Canb...
© 2016 Jason SmeatonWar and the military were traditionally perceived as masculine domains, but duri...
This article analyses The Maryborough War Memorial (1922) as an example of how one Queensland commun...
My work seeks to understand the origins of national identity as it pertains to the Anzacs of Austral...
[Excerpt] The Australian War Memorial (hereafter Memorial) has a large collection of canvases of the...
Once again, Journal of Australian Studies offers an eclectic interdisciplinary mix of current resear...
This thesis explores the extent to which Indigenous Australian and Māori First World War service has...
At the end of the First World War most people’s thoughts turned to putting the war behind them, but ...
This paper examined how the commemoration of the Australian Army Nursing Service undertaken in the w...
Throughout history women have shown a willingness to participate actively in the defence of their co...
The decade after the end of the Great War saw many disagreements taking place as to how the war shou...
On Anzac Day, a day when many of my colleagues will be writing about the crucial issue of the place ...
Discourses of war are disseminated and legitimised not only through speeches and written texts, but ...