Writing the First World War after 1918(Journalism Studies) H 158 p. 18
目次
Introduction – Writing the First World War after 1918: Journalism, history and commemoration Adrian Bingham 1. The Platform: How Pullman porters used railways to engage in networked journalism Allissa V. Richardson 2. The Aussie 1918-1931: Cartoons, digger remembrance and First World War identity Jane Chapman 3. The Great War and "Military Memory": War and remembrance in the civic public sphere, 1919-1939 Eleanor K. O’Keeffe 4. Whose War Was it Anyway: Irish journalism and the Great War after 1918 Mark O’Brien 5. La Grande Guerre: The First World War in the journalism of French veterans Sally Carlton 6. "The Vapourings of Empty Young Men?": Legacies of their hostility between 1916 and 1918 in British newspaper treatment of conscientious objectors during the German blitzkrieg and invasion scare of 1940 Tim Luckhurst 7. "The Truth About the War Finally": Critics’ expectations of war literature during the Weimar Republic: the reception of Erich Maria Remarque’s Im Westen nichts Neues [All Quiet on the Western Front], 1928-1930 Thomas F. Schneider 8. The Mediation of Constructions of Pacifism in Journey’s End and The Searcher, Two Contrasting Dramatic Memorials from the late 1920s Charlotte Purkis 9. Reawakening the Nation: British journalists and the interwar debate on the origins of the First World War Nathan N. Orgill
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