Where once geographers could argue that the ideological issues surrounding the quintessential character of English and Empire military cemeteries had drawn little comment, there is now a considerable literature exploring the space and place of remembrance. Increasing attention has been paid during the past decade to the value of "situation" in the discourse of death, grieving and commemoration. In this respect, "situation" should be understood to be a focus on "place", "space" and the geopolitical (Gillis 1994). The emerging discipline of cultural geography in the late 1990s created the tools necessary to elaborate "space" in the abstract, to regard "place" as a site where an indiv...