Fighting Different Wars: Experience, Memory, and the First World War in BritainJanet Watson's study of war and memory uses published and unpublished British wartime and retrospective writings concerning World War I. Watson examines differing attitudes to this war among men and women, across different social classes, and in different periods. She concludes that participants often saw their experience - lived and remembered- as either work or service. In fact, far from having a united front, many active participants were 'fighting different wars', and this process only continued in the decades following peace. |
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What people are saying - Write a review
LibraryThing Review
User Review - Steelwhisper - LibraryThingToo revisionist for comfort. It all depends on which accounts you select for what you want to say. This selection is very one-sided and defends warfare way beyond what people truly said or were allowed to say. Read full review
Contents
men and women in military | 17 |
amateur and professional | 59 |
auxiliary war workers | 105 |
the Beales of Standen | 146 |
publishing and the postwar years | 185 |
Creating disillusionment in popular memory | 219 |
memory enters history | 262 |
Conclusion Climbing out of the trenches | 297 |
312 | |
Other editions - View all
Fighting Different Wars: Experience, Memory, and the First World War in Britain Janet S. K. Watson No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
active Alec-Tweedie argued Armistice August auxiliary Beale to Helen Beale to Margaret Bill Nevill Blunden British Brittain civilian combat conflict criticism cultural Day School Trust described diary disillusionment Dorothy Brown Edmund Blunden efforts England especially experience factory felt female Field to Helen fighting Flora Murray France front gender girls GPDST Graves Helen Beale History ideas Imperial War Museum IWM-DD January Katharine Furse Land Army letter lives Maggie masculine memoir memory middle-class military hospitals Miss munitions workers nation Nevill novel officers patriotic perspective PL Women popular position postwar professional ranks Rathbone Red Cross remembered retrospective reviewers Robert Graves Sassoon seemed served Sherston Sherston's Progress Siegfried Sassoon sister social soldier's story soldiers Sybil Field Testament of Youth trained nurses trenches uniform University Press VADs Vera Brittain Voluntary Aid Detachments WAAC wards wartime woman women doctors working-class women World writing WRNS wrote young