Making meaning from the First World War was not only the preserve of the poets, novelists and historians who helped shape Anglophone modern memory. In Australasian theatres, halls and cinemas in the 1920s and 1930s, the war formed a backdrop for drama, adventure, romance and comedy. “Tommies”, diggers, plucky nurses and courageous widows populated vaudeville and movies, helping Australians and New Zealanders make sense of their war. Exploring the remnant evidence of such ephemeral popular performances, this article focuses on popular, everyday narration of the Great War that was often shared as part of an audience. How can we understand war-themed comedies and romances in the context of widespread mourning and sometimes painful reintegratio...
Over the past two decades children’s picture books dealing with the Australian experience during the...
Australia's World War I veterans, particularly the Anzacs of Gallipoli, are a quintessential part of...
This essay is an attempt to read the war plays of James Matthew Barrie, with a special emphasis on o...
Making meaning from the First World War was not only the preserve of the poets, novelists and histor...
The twenty-seven original contributions to this volume investigate the ways in which the First World...
© 2013 Dr. Carolyn Anne HolbrookThis thesis traces the history of the Great War in the Australian im...
Australian readers consumed with great interest the fruits of the war books boom that began in Europ...
The Anzac legend has never been static. Between the two World Wars it underwent significant change, ...
Traditionally, Australian novels about the First World War have been treated as shrines of an annoyi...
Turning away from the professional, metropolitan theatres offers an alternate history of war-themed ...
2014 marked the centenary of the outbreak of World War One (WW1), but in Australia, it was merely th...
During the First World War, New Zealand society was dominated by messages stressing the paramount im...
The history of children’s war play in Australia during and after the First World War remains largel...
Australian cinema experienced a war of two halves during 1914-1918. The start was dominated by war d...
Before the First World War most Australians shared the emotions and traditions of the British Empire...
Over the past two decades children’s picture books dealing with the Australian experience during the...
Australia's World War I veterans, particularly the Anzacs of Gallipoli, are a quintessential part of...
This essay is an attempt to read the war plays of James Matthew Barrie, with a special emphasis on o...
Making meaning from the First World War was not only the preserve of the poets, novelists and histor...
The twenty-seven original contributions to this volume investigate the ways in which the First World...
© 2013 Dr. Carolyn Anne HolbrookThis thesis traces the history of the Great War in the Australian im...
Australian readers consumed with great interest the fruits of the war books boom that began in Europ...
The Anzac legend has never been static. Between the two World Wars it underwent significant change, ...
Traditionally, Australian novels about the First World War have been treated as shrines of an annoyi...
Turning away from the professional, metropolitan theatres offers an alternate history of war-themed ...
2014 marked the centenary of the outbreak of World War One (WW1), but in Australia, it was merely th...
During the First World War, New Zealand society was dominated by messages stressing the paramount im...
The history of children’s war play in Australia during and after the First World War remains largel...
Australian cinema experienced a war of two halves during 1914-1918. The start was dominated by war d...
Before the First World War most Australians shared the emotions and traditions of the British Empire...
Over the past two decades children’s picture books dealing with the Australian experience during the...
Australia's World War I veterans, particularly the Anzacs of Gallipoli, are a quintessential part of...
This essay is an attempt to read the war plays of James Matthew Barrie, with a special emphasis on o...