1
Fussell P. The Great War and modern memory. New York: Oxford University Press 1975.
2
Gregory A. The last Great War: British society and the First World War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2008.
3
Hobsbawm EJ. The age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991. London: Abacus 1995.
4
Mayer P. The pacifist conscience. Harmondsworth: Penguin 1966.
5
Todman D. The Great War: myth and memory. London: Hambledon and London 2005.
6
Walzer M. Just and unjust wars: a moral argument with historical illustrations. 4th ed. New York: BasicBooks 2006.
7
Winter JM. Remembering war: the Great War between memory and history in the twentieth century. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press 2006.
8
Gregory, Adrian, author. The last Great War: British society and the First World War. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2008.
9
Welcome | First World War Poetry Digital Archive. http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ww1lit/
10
Trench Fever | War � what _is_ it good for? https://trenchfever.wordpress.com/
11
King’s Collections : The Serving Soldier : Home. http://www.kingscollections.org/servingsoldier/home
12
Carr EH, Davies RW. What is history? 2nd ed. London: Penguin 1990.
13
Joll J, Martel G. The origins of the First World War. 3rd ed. Harlow: Pearson Longman 2007.
14
Joll J, Martel G. The origins of the First World War. 3rd ed. Harlow: Pearson Longman 2007.
15
Mombauer A. The Fischer Controversy, Documents and the ‘Truth’ about the origins of the First World War. Journal of Contemporary History. 2013;48:290–314.
16
Blackbourn D, Eley G. The peculiarities of German history: bourgeois society and politics in nineteenth-century Germany. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1984.
17
Fischer F, Jackson M. War of illusions: German policies from 1911 to 1914. London: Chatto and Windus 1975.
18
Freud S. On murder, mourning and melancholia. [New ed.]. London: Penguin 2005.
19
Gregory A. The last Great War: British society and the First World War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2008.
20
Gregory, Adrian, author. The last Great War: British society and the First World War. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2008.
21
Keegan J. A history of warfare. London: Hutchinson 1993.
22
Jurgen Kocka. German History before Hitler: The Debate about the German Sonderweg. Journal of Contemporary History. 1988;23:3–16.
23
Paris M. Warrior nation: images of war in British popular culture, 1850-2000. London: Reaktion 2000.
24
Paris M. Warrior nation: images of war in British popular culture, 1850-2000. London: Reaktion 2000.
25
Sondhaus L. World War I: the global revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2011.
26
Taylor AJP. How wars begin. London: Futura Publications 1980.
27
Winter JM, Prost A. The Great War in history: debates and controversies, 1914 to the present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2005.
28
Winter JM, Prost A, Dawsonera. The Great War in history: debates and controversies, 1914 to the present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2005.
29
Winter J, Prost A. Three Historiographical Configurations. The Great War in History: Debates and Controversies 1914 to the Present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2005.
30
Thomson A. Anzac memories: living with the legend. Anzac memories: living with the legend. Melbourne: Oxford University Press 1994.
31
Oppenheimer M, Scates B. Australians at War. Australia’s history: themes and debates. Sydney, Australia: University of New South Wales Press 2005.
32
Demobilization and Empire: Empire Nationalism and Soldier Citizenship in Australia after the First World War. Journal of Contemporary History. 2015;50:124–43.
33
Howard J. ParlInfo - Address at ANZAC Day dawn service, Gallipoli. 2005. http://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/search/display/display.w3p;query=(Id:media/pressrel/cbuf6);rec=0
34
Barnett C. The collapse of British power. London (11 New Fetter La., EC4P 4EE): Eyre Methuen Ltd 1972.
35
DeGroot GJ. The first world war. Basingstoke: Macmillan 2000.
36
de Groot G. Sideshows and Imperial Struggles. The First World War. Basingstoke: Palgrave 2000.
37
Gregory A. British ‘War Enthusiasm’ in 1914, a reassessment. Evidence, history, and the Great War: historians and the impact of 1914-18. New York: Berghahn 2003.
38
Paul Rainbird. Representing Nation, Dividing Community: The Broken Hill War Memorial, New South Wales, Australia. World Archaeology. 2003;35:22–34.
39
Scates B. Return to Gallipoli: walking the battlefields of the Great War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2006.
40
Scates, Bruce, author. Return to Gallipoli: walking the battlefields of the Great War. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2006.
41
Scates B. The unquiet grave: Imaginary journeys. Return to Gallipoli: Walking the Battlefields of the Great War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2006.
42
Strachan H. The First World War. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2001.
43
Bruce Scates. Memorialising Gallipoli: Manufacturing Memory at Anzac. Public History Review. 2008;15.
44
Weir P. Gallipoli. 1981.
45
Gallipoli and the Anzacs. http://www.gallipoli.gov.au/
46
IndexB.html. http://www.anzacs.net/
47
Berman M. All that is solid melts into air: the experience of modernity. London: Verso 1983.
48
Marwick A. Chapter. The deluge: British society and the First World War. London: Macmillan 1973.
49
Kramer A. Dynamic of destruction: culture and mass killing in the First World War. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007.
50
Kramer A. Dynamic of destruction: culture and mass killing in the First World War. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007.
51
Kramer A. The Burning of Louvain. Dynamic of Destruction. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007.
52
Howard M. War in European history. London (etc.): Oxford University Press 1976.
53
Marwick A. War and social change in the twentieth century: a comparative study of Britain, France, Germany, Russia and the United States. London: Macmillan 1974.
54
Tate T. Modernism, history and the First World War. Manchester: Manchester University Press 1998.
55
Sheffield GD. The Somme. London: Cassell Military 2004.
56
Middlebrook M. The first day on the Somme: 1 July 1916. Harmondsworth: Penguin 1984.
57
Middlebrook M. The first day on the Somme: 1 July 1916. Harmondsworth: Penguin 1984.
58
Todman DG. The 90th Anniversary of the Battle of the Somme. War memory and popular culture: essays on modes of remembrance and commemoration. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland 2009.
59
Todman D. The 90th Anniversary of the Battle of the Somme. War Memory and Popular Culture: Essays on Modes of Remembrance and Commemoration. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland 2008.
60
Dyer G. The missing of the Somme. London: Phoenix Press 2001.
61
Faulks S. Birdsong. London: Vintage 1994.
62
Keegan J. The face of battle. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books 1978.
63
Macdonald L. Somme. Harmondsworth: Penguin 1993.
64
The Somme. 2006.
65
The Somme: from defeat to victory. 2006.
66
Todman D. The Great War: myth and memory. London: Hambledon and London 2005.
67
Bourke J. An intimate history of killing: face-to-face killing in twentieth-century warfare. London: Granta 1999.
68
Bourke J. The Warrior Myth. An Intimate History of Killing. London: Granta 1999.
69
Braybon. Winners or Losers: Women’s Symbolic Role in the War Story. Evidence, history, and the Great War: historians and the impact of 1914-18. New York: Berghahn 2003.
70
Higonnet MR, Higgonet P. The Double Helix. Behind the lines: gender and the two world wars. London: Yale University Press 1987.
71
Bourke J. Dismembering the male: men’s bodies, Britain and the Great War. London: Reaktion 1996.
72
DeGroot GJ. Blighty: British society in the era of the great war. London: Longman 1996.
73
Grayzel SR. Women’s identities at war: gender, motherhood, and politics in Britain and France during the First World War. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press 1999.
74
Nicoletta F. Gullace. White Feathers and Wounded Men: Female Patriotism and the Memory of the Great War. Journal of British Studies. 1997;36:178–206.
75
Marwick A. The deluge: British society and the First World War. Student ed. London: Macmillan 1973.
76
Noakes L. Women in the British Army: war and the gentle sex, 1907-1948. London: Routledge 2006.
77
Showalter E. The female malady: women, madness, and English culture, 1830-1980. London: Virago 1987.
78
Showalter E. Male Hysteria. The Female Malady. 1987.
79
Stryker L. The Mental Cases: British Shellshock and the Politics of Interpretation. Evidence, History and the Great War: Historians and the Impact of 1914-1918. New York: Berghahn 2003.
80
Owen W, Day Lewis C, Blunden E. The collected poems of Wilfred Owen. Amended ed. New York: New Directions 1965.
81
Owen W. Mental cases. https://www.edgehill.ac.uk/thetorch/responses-to-poetry/wilfred-owen-mental-cases/
82
Barker P. Regeneration. Harmondsworth: Penguin 1992.
83
Bourke J. An intimate history of killing: face-to-face killing in twentieth-century warfare. London: Granta 1999.
84
Leed EJ. No man’s land: combat & identity in World War 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1979.
85
Peter Leese. Problems Returning Home: The British Psychological Casualties of the Great War. The Historical Journal. 1997;40:1055–67.
86
Owen W, Day Lewis C, Blunden E. The collected poems of Wilfred Owen. Amended ed. New York: New Directions 1965.
87
Roper M. The secret battle: emotional survival in the Great War. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2009.
88
Shephard B. A war of nerves: soldiers and psychiatrists in the twentieth century. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press 2001.
89
Tate T. Modernism, history and the First World War. Manchester: Manchester University Press 1998.
90
Winter JM. Remembering war: the Great War between memory and history in the twentieth century. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press 2006.
91
Woolf V. Mrs. Dalloway. London: L. & V. Woolf at the Hogarth Press 1925.
92
Fussell P. The Great War and modern memory. New York: Oxford University Press 1975.
93
Eksteins M. Rites of spring: the Great War and the birth of the modern age. London: Bantam 1989.
94
Paris M. Warrior nation: images of war in British popular culture, 1850-2000. London: Reaktion 2000.
95
Paris M. Warrior nation: images of war in British popular culture, 1850-2000. London: Reaktion 2000.
96
Malvern S, Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. Modern art, Britain and the Great War: witnessing, testimony and remembrance. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press 2004.
97
Hynes SL. A war imagined: the First World War and English culture. London: Pimlico 1992.
98
Meyer J. British popular culture and the First World War. Leiden: Brill 2008.
99
Robb G. British culture and the First World War. Basingstoke: Palgrave 2002.
100
Brandon L. Art and war. London: Tauris 2007.
101
Harries M, Harries S. The war artists: British official war art of the twentieth century. London: Joseph in association with the Imperial War Museum and the Tate Gallery 1983.
102
Winter JM. Sites of memory, sites of mourning: the Great War in European cultural history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1995.
103
Winter, J. M., author. Sites of memory, sites of mourning: the Great War in European cultural history. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2014.
104
Kelly A. Cinema and the Great War. London: Routledge 1997.
105
Kelly A, MyiLibrary. Cinema and the Great War. London: Routledge 1997.
106
Paris M. Warrior nation: images of war in British popular culture, 1850-2000. London: Reaktion 2000.
107
Paris M. Warrior nation: images of war in British popular culture, 1850-2000. London: Reaktion 2000.
108
Robb G. British culture and the First World War. Basingstoke: Palgrave 2002.
109
King A. Chapter. Memorials of the Great War in Britain: the symbolism and politics of remembrance. Oxford: Berg 1998.
110
Gregory A. Chapter. The silence of memory: Armistice Day 1919-1946. Oxford: Berg 1994.
111
Niven B. War memorials at the intersection of politics, culture and memory. Journal of war and culture studies. 2007;1:39–45.
112
Niven B. War memorials at the intersection of politics, culture and memory. Journal of War & Culture Studies. 2007;1:39–45. doi: 10.1386/jwcs.1.1.39_0
113
Winter J. Remembrance and Redemption: a Social Interpretation of War Memorials. Harvard Design Magazine.
114
Bourke J. Re-Membering. Dismembering the male: men’s bodies, Britain and the Great War. London: Reaktion 1996.
115
Koureas G. Memory, masculinity and national identity in British visual culture, 1914-1930: a study of ‘unconquerable manhood’. Aldershot: Ashgate 2007.
116
Roper M. The secret battle: emotional survival in the Great War. Manchester: Manchester University Press 2009.
117
Skelton T, Gliddon G. Lutyens and the Great War. London: Frances Lincoln 2008.
118
Summers J, Harris B. Remembered: the history of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. London: Merrell 2007.
119
Winter JM. Sites of memory, sites of mourning: the Great War in European cultural history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1995.
120
Winter, J. M., author. Sites of memory, sites of mourning: the Great War in European cultural history. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2014.
121
Ashplant TG, Dawson G, Roper M. The politics of war memory and commemoration. London: Routledge 2000.
122
Ashplant TG, Dawson G, Roper M. The politics of war memory and commemoration. London: Routledge 2000.
123
Todman D. The Great War: myth and memory. London: Hambledon and London 2005.
124
Todman D. Mud. The Great War: Myth and Memory. London: Hambledon 2005.
125
Barker P. Regeneration. Harmondsworth: Penguin 1992.
126
Blunden E. Undertones of war. [new ed.]. London: Penguin 2010.
127
Brittain V. Testament of youth: an autobiographical study of the years 1900-1925. London: Virago 1978.
128
Graves R. Good-bye to all that: an autobiography. London: Jonathan Cape 1929.
129
Faulks S. Birdsong. London: Vintage 1994.
130
Hemingway E. A farewell to arms. London: Vintage 1999.
131
Jünger E. Storm of steel. London: Penguin 2004.
132
Owen W, Day Lewis C, Blunden E. The collected poems of Wilfred Owen. Amended ed. New York: New Directions 1965.
133
Remarque EM. All quiet on the western front. London: Vintage 1996.
134
Sassoon S. Memoirs of an infantry officer. London: Faber and Faber 1965.
135
Sherriff RC. Journey’s end. London: Penguin 2000.
136
10 great First World War films | BFI. http://www.bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/news-bfi/lists/10-great-first-world-war-films
137
Blackadder Goes Forth (1989) Plan A: Captain Cook. 1989.
138
Blackadder Goes Forth (1989) Plan B: Corporal Punishment. 1989.
139
Blackadder Goes Forth (1989): Plan C: Major Star. 1989.
140
Blackadder Goes Forth (1989) Plan D: Private Plane. 1989.
141
Blackadder Goes Forth (1989) Plan E: General Hospital. 1989.
142
Blackadder Goes Forth (1989) Plan F: Goodbyeee. 1989.
143
MacKinnon G, Barker P. Regeneration. 1997.
144
Attenborough R, Tilton C. Oh! What a lovely war. 1969.
145
Oh! What a Lovely War (1969). 1969.
146
O’Brien J. The Monocled mutineer. 1986.
147
BBC - World War One on TV and Radio. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01nb93y
148
Meyer J. British popular culture and the First World War. Leiden: Brill 2008.
149
Fussell P. The Great War and modern memory. New York: Oxford University Press 1975.
150
Keren M, Herwig HH. War memory and popular culture: essays on modes of remembrance and commemoration. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland 2009.
151
Scates B. Return to Gallipoli: walking the battlefields of the Great War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2006.
152
Scates, Bruce, author. Return to Gallipoli: walking the battlefields of the Great War. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press 2006.
153
Black G. Museums, Memory and History. Cultural and Social History. 2011;8:415–27. doi: 10.2752/147800411X13026260433275
154
Cooke S, Jenkins L. Discourses of regeneration in early twentieth-century Britain: from Bedlam to the Imperial War Museum. Area. 2001;33:382–90. doi: 10.1111/1475-4762.00044
155
The First World War Galleries, Cornish. http://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/F/bo19385394.html
156
Alys Cundy. Thresholds of Memory: Representing Function through Space and Object at the Imperial War Museum, London, 1918–2014. Museum History Journal.
157
Lisle D. Sublime Lessons: Education and Ambivalence in War Exhibitions. Millennium - Journal of International Studies. 2006;34.
158
Mercer A. The Changing Face of Exhibiting Women’s Wartime Work at the Imperial War Museum. Women’s History Review. 2013;22:330–44. doi: 10.1080/09612025.2012.726119
159
Watson S. Myth, Memory and the Senses in the Churchill Museum. London: Routledge 2010.
160
Watson S. Myth, Memory and the Senses in the Churchill Museum. Museum materialities: objects, engagements, interpretations. London: Routledge 2010:204–33.
161
Hobsbawm EJ. The age of extremes: the short twentieth century, 1914-1991. London: Abacus 1995.
162
Mazower M. Dark continent: Europe’s twentieth century. New York: Vintage 2000.
163
Sluga G. The Aftermath of War. The Oxford handbook of fascism. Oxford: Oxford University Press 2009.
164
Evans R. Chapter One, The Legacy of the Past. The coming of the Third Reich. London: Penguin 2004.
165
Gilbert M. The roots of appeasement. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1966.
166
Martel G. The origins of the Second World War reconsidered: A.J.P. Taylor and the historians. 2nd ed. London: Routledge 1999.
167
Taylor AJP. The origins of the Second World War. London: Penguin 2001.
168
Overy RJ. The morbid age: Britain between the wars. London: Allen Lane 2009.