Remembering the South African War Britain and the Memory of the Anglo-Boer War, from 1899 to the Present / Peter Donaldson.
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TextPublisher: Liverpool University Press, Description: 1 online resource (202 p.)ISBN: 9781781385722Subject(s): History / Africa | HistoryGenre/Form: Electronic books.Online resources: View this content on Open Research Library. Summary: The experience of the South African War sharpened the desire to commemorate for a number of reasons. An increasingly literate public, a burgeoning populist press, an army reinforced by waves of volunteers and, to contemporaries at least, a shockingly high death toll embedded the war firmly in the national consciousness. In addition, with the fallen buried far from home those left behind required other forms of commemoration. For these reasons, the South African War was an important moment of transition in commemorative practice and foreshadowed the rituals of remembrance that engulfed Britain in the aftermath of the Great War. This work provides the first comprehensive survey of the memorialisation process in Britain in the aftermath of the South African War. By uncovering the themes and myths that underpinned these interpretations of the war, shifting patterns in how the war was represented and conceived are revealed.
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| DT1758 .K48 2019 Does the black middle class exist and are we members? : | DT1768.C65 T38 2019 Decolonising sambo : | DT1807 .V38 2000 Sudáfrica | DT1896 .D66 2013 Remembering the South African War | DT1918.P83 K84 2012 War of Words | DT1971 .R467 2017 Remains of the Social | DT3337 .F86 2012 The Origins of War in Mozambique |
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The experience of the South African War sharpened the desire to commemorate for a number of reasons. An increasingly literate public, a burgeoning populist press, an army reinforced by waves of volunteers and, to contemporaries at least, a shockingly high death toll embedded the war firmly in the national consciousness. In addition, with the fallen buried far from home those left behind required other forms of commemoration. For these reasons, the South African War was an important moment of transition in commemorative practice and foreshadowed the rituals of remembrance that engulfed Britain in the aftermath of the Great War. This work provides the first comprehensive survey of the memorialisation process in Britain in the aftermath of the South African War. By uncovering the themes and myths that underpinned these interpretations of the war, shifting patterns in how the war was represented and conceived are revealed.
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