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In the aftermath of the Great War, a wave of tourists and pilgrims
visited the battlefields, cemeteries and memorials of the war. The
cultural history of this 'battlefield tourism' is chronicled in
this absorbing and original book, which shows how the phenomenon
served to construct memory in Britain, as well as in Australia and
Canada. The author demonstrates that high and low culture,
tradition and modernism, the sacred and the profane were often
inter-related, rather than polar opposites. The various responses
to the actual and imagined landscapes of battlefields are
discussed, as well as bereavement and how this was shaped by
gender, religion and the military experience. Individual memory and
experience combined with nationalism and 'imperial' identity as
powerful forces informing the pilgrim experience. But this book not
only analyzes travel to battlefields, which unsurprisingly
paralleled the growth of the modern tourist industry; it also looks
closely at the transformation of national war memorials into
pilgrimage sites, and shows how responses both to battlefields and
memorials, which continue to serve as potent symbols, evolved in
the years after the Great War.
In the aftermath of the Great War, a wave of tourists and pilgrims
visited the battlefields, cemeteries and memorials of the war. The
cultural history of this ‘ battlefield tourism’ is chronicled in
this absorbing and original book, which shows how the phenomenon
served to construct memory in Britain, as well as in Australia and
Canada. The author demonstrates that high and low culture,
tradition and modernism, the sacred and the profane were often
inter-related, rather than polar opposites. The various responses
to the actual and imagined landscapes of battlefields are
discussed, as well as bereavement and how this was shaped by
gender, religion and the military experience. Individual memory and
experience combined with nationalism and ‘ imperial’ identity as
powerful forces informing the pilgrim experience. But this book not
only analyzes travel to battlefields, which unsurprisingly
paralleled the growth of the modern tourist industry; it also looks
closely at the transformation of national war memorials into
pilgrimage sites, and shows how responses both to battlefields and
memorials, which continue to serve as potent symbols, evolved in
the years after the Great War.
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