Long lines of young Tommies going over the top and staunchly walking into a storm of steel and flame whilst dribbling a football is part of Britain’s collective memory of the World War I. Collective memory is developed and sustained through the continuous production of representational forms. This paper draws on visual cultural studies to explore the images of the “football charges” produced during the war. It concludes that the published images aspired to bolster morale on the home front through buttressing traditional notions of courage and the sporting spirit. However the images created by serving soldiers and Lady Butler did not glorify war but revealed new concepts of courage necessary for survival in the trenches and to go “over the t...
Using four bombarded coastal locations in north-east England as case studies, this article explores ...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
In the late-nineteenth century, Britain saw the development of a mass culture consumed by a new publ...
In this article, three artworks of the First World War containing images of recreational football ar...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...
This article examines the museum displays and modern memorials that draw on the role of football and...
This article examines the image of the First World War in British political cartoons, from the after...
The image of World War Two as a "people's war", during which a new sense of British national identit...
This book considers the diversity of the experiences and legacies of the First World War, looking at...
As Dan Todman has persuasively argued, in the British popular imagination the First World War is ass...
This paper examines the representation of children in the popular British World War I publication, W...
In the early nineteenth century, the British army placed a high priority on maintaining a splendid o...
World War I was one of the first wars to be extensively photographed. What was done with these photo...
The memory of the Western Front still seems to haunt British society nearly 90 years after the Armis...
The image of World War Two as a ‘people’s war,’ during which a new sense of British national identi...
Using four bombarded coastal locations in north-east England as case studies, this article explores ...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
In the late-nineteenth century, Britain saw the development of a mass culture consumed by a new publ...
In this article, three artworks of the First World War containing images of recreational football ar...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...
This article examines the museum displays and modern memorials that draw on the role of football and...
This article examines the image of the First World War in British political cartoons, from the after...
The image of World War Two as a "people's war", during which a new sense of British national identit...
This book considers the diversity of the experiences and legacies of the First World War, looking at...
As Dan Todman has persuasively argued, in the British popular imagination the First World War is ass...
This paper examines the representation of children in the popular British World War I publication, W...
In the early nineteenth century, the British army placed a high priority on maintaining a splendid o...
World War I was one of the first wars to be extensively photographed. What was done with these photo...
The memory of the Western Front still seems to haunt British society nearly 90 years after the Armis...
The image of World War Two as a ‘people’s war,’ during which a new sense of British national identi...
Using four bombarded coastal locations in north-east England as case studies, this article explores ...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
In the late-nineteenth century, Britain saw the development of a mass culture consumed by a new publ...