This chapter examines the First World War letters and diaries of Australian soldiers for insights into the relationships between language and violence, focusing on accounts of violent actions and the deaths these caused. Analysis from a corpus of writings from 22 soldiers demonstrates around two-thirds of accounts utilise linguistic resources to minimise or downplay the realities of violence. Two main approaches are generally used: figurative language (euphemism and metaphor) and language that downplays human involvement (passive voice, simplified register, nominalisation/light verb constructions, and the use of inanimate nouns in place of people involved). Our exemplification and analysis of these strategies provides insight into both sold...
In a recent paper, the Australian historian, Martyn Lyons (2013), reviews ...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
First World War shell shock in British poetry of soldier-poets and modernist prose of women writers ...
This chapter examines the First World War letters and diaries of Australian soldiers for insights in...
This volume seeks to add to a growing field of scholarship that has turned its focus to understandin...
Historical correspondence has been the object of increasing interest in the field of English linguis...
This thesis investigates the ways in which soldiers use language to report and structure their exper...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
The ego documents, especially war letters from the front of the soldiers, have been studied from man...
The ego documents, especially war letters from the front of the soldiers, have been studied from man...
The perceptions and interpretations of soldiers participating in combat are not just biographically ...
One aspect of my research has been concerned with the changing form of war correspondence between so...
Death was ubiquitous in the First World War and while contemporaries acknowledged this, soldiers’ ex...
Drawing on a diverse collection of both published and unpublished First World War diaries and letter...
Abstract – Historical correspondence has been the object of increasing interest in the field of Engl...
In a recent paper, the Australian historian, Martyn Lyons (2013), reviews ...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
First World War shell shock in British poetry of soldier-poets and modernist prose of women writers ...
This chapter examines the First World War letters and diaries of Australian soldiers for insights in...
This volume seeks to add to a growing field of scholarship that has turned its focus to understandin...
Historical correspondence has been the object of increasing interest in the field of English linguis...
This thesis investigates the ways in which soldiers use language to report and structure their exper...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
The ego documents, especially war letters from the front of the soldiers, have been studied from man...
The ego documents, especially war letters from the front of the soldiers, have been studied from man...
The perceptions and interpretations of soldiers participating in combat are not just biographically ...
One aspect of my research has been concerned with the changing form of war correspondence between so...
Death was ubiquitous in the First World War and while contemporaries acknowledged this, soldiers’ ex...
Drawing on a diverse collection of both published and unpublished First World War diaries and letter...
Abstract – Historical correspondence has been the object of increasing interest in the field of Engl...
In a recent paper, the Australian historian, Martyn Lyons (2013), reviews ...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
First World War shell shock in British poetry of soldier-poets and modernist prose of women writers ...