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War and Memorials : The Age of Nationalism and the Great War.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: War (Hi) Stories SeriesPublisher: Boston : BRILL, 2019Copyright date: ©2019Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (290 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9783657788224
Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: War and MemorialsLOC classification:
  • D663 .W37 2019
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Contents -- Chapter 1 Introduction: War Memorials and Critical Insights into the Human Past -- Chapter 2 A Duty to Remember (and Forget?): A Transnational Perspective on Commemorating War -- Chapter 3 Sacred Shrines of the Secular Age: War Memorials and Landscape in the Twentieth Century and Beyond -- Chapter 4 "… where Liberty was fought for": Civil War Memorials in England -- Chapter 5 Patriotic Nationalism and Valorous Masculinity: The National Monument for the Prussian Wars of Liberation -- Chapter 6 "They Did Their Bit" - British Animal Welfare Societies and the Memorialization of War Animals since the Anglo-Boer War -- Chapter 7 Identity and Memory at First World War British Imperial Memorials on the Western Front -- Chapter 8 The Construction of a Memorial Space: The Gallipoli Campaign and Spatial Remembrance -- Chapter 9 A Living Memorial - The Toc H Movement and Talbot House -- Chapter 10 Temporary Cenotaph: A Contradiction in Terms? -- Chapter 11 "They Did Not Want Great Buildings": The American and Canadian Legionnaires as Living Memorials -- Contributors -- Index.
Summary: War Memorials were an important element of nation building, for the invention of traditions, and the estab-lishment of historical traditions. Especially nationalist remembrance in the late 19th century and the memory of the First World War stimulated a memorial boom in the period which the present book is focusing on. The remembrance of war is nothing particularly new in history, since victories in decisive battles had been of interest since ancient times. However, the age of na-tionalism and the First World War triggered a new level of war remembrance that was expressed in countless memorials all over the world. The present volume pre-sents the research of international specialists from dif-ferent disciplines within the Humanities, whose research is dealing with the role of war memorials for the remem-brance of conflicts like the First World War and their perceptions within the analyzed societies. It will be shown how memorials - in several different chronologi-cal and geographical contexts - were used to remember the dead, remind the survivors, and warn the descendants.
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Intro -- Contents -- Chapter 1 Introduction: War Memorials and Critical Insights into the Human Past -- Chapter 2 A Duty to Remember (and Forget?): A Transnational Perspective on Commemorating War -- Chapter 3 Sacred Shrines of the Secular Age: War Memorials and Landscape in the Twentieth Century and Beyond -- Chapter 4 "… where Liberty was fought for": Civil War Memorials in England -- Chapter 5 Patriotic Nationalism and Valorous Masculinity: The National Monument for the Prussian Wars of Liberation -- Chapter 6 "They Did Their Bit" - British Animal Welfare Societies and the Memorialization of War Animals since the Anglo-Boer War -- Chapter 7 Identity and Memory at First World War British Imperial Memorials on the Western Front -- Chapter 8 The Construction of a Memorial Space: The Gallipoli Campaign and Spatial Remembrance -- Chapter 9 A Living Memorial - The Toc H Movement and Talbot House -- Chapter 10 Temporary Cenotaph: A Contradiction in Terms? -- Chapter 11 "They Did Not Want Great Buildings": The American and Canadian Legionnaires as Living Memorials -- Contributors -- Index.

War Memorials were an important element of nation building, for the invention of traditions, and the estab-lishment of historical traditions. Especially nationalist remembrance in the late 19th century and the memory of the First World War stimulated a memorial boom in the period which the present book is focusing on. The remembrance of war is nothing particularly new in history, since victories in decisive battles had been of interest since ancient times. However, the age of na-tionalism and the First World War triggered a new level of war remembrance that was expressed in countless memorials all over the world. The present volume pre-sents the research of international specialists from dif-ferent disciplines within the Humanities, whose research is dealing with the role of war memorials for the remem-brance of conflicts like the First World War and their perceptions within the analyzed societies. It will be shown how memorials - in several different chronologi-cal and geographical contexts - were used to remember the dead, remind the survivors, and warn the descendants.

Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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