Wartime Ephemera and the Transmission of Diverse Family and Community Histories
Materialtyp:
ArtikelUtgivningsinformation: Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2024Beskrivning: 1 electronic resource (190 p.)Innehållstyp: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783725821976
- 9783725821983
- Biography, Literature and Literary studies
- Biography and non-fiction prose
- Australian War Memorial
- Austria
- British Empire
- Canadian nationalism
- First World War
- France
- Germany
- Greek Cypriot refugees
- Holocaust
- Indigenous Australians
- National Socialism
- Nazihintergrund
- Polish refugees
- Second World War
- anthropology
- co-production
- collect
- commemoration
- community
- creative writing
- critical family history
- cultural memory
- curate
- daughters
- divergent memory
- emotional community
- ephemera
- family history and memory
- family memory
- forgetting
- grief
- history
- intergenerational transmission
- last will and testament
- literature
- marginalised communities
- marginalised histories
- material culture
- material objects
- memorialization
- memory
- migrant memory
- military
- military descendants
- military families
- museums
- myth
- nation
- national identity
- object stories
- poetry
- prisoners of war
- public history
- remembering
- return journeys
- soldier art
- translanguaging
- veterans
- war
- war poetry
- war stories
- wartime logbook
- women
- écriture ordinaire
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
This reprint, which began as a Special Issue in Genealogy, edited by Dr. Chris Kempshall and Professor Catriona Pennell, is an outcome of the AHRC-funded project Ephemera and writing about war in Britain, from 1914 to the present, undertaken by scholars at both Northumbria University and the University of Exeter. The focus of this project was to explore how ephemera and ephemeral objects can be used to transmit new understandings of experiences related to British military action throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Of particular importance to those working on the project was the idea that these objects may provide insights into the military experiences of those whose histories exist outside of the mainstream, particularly those from marginalised or under-represented communities who are not always featured in the dominant forms of commemoration or reflection. This Special Issue takes this concept and aims to expand it further by exploring objects, stories, and people beyond just the British. The authors of this Special Issue include both emerging and established academics, featuring a wide variety of objects and conflicts that help us to reframe our existing understandings of the experience of war and its aftermath.
Creative Commons Licence cc by cc https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
eng
Freely available e-book