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Comparatively little is known about the musical cultures of the
British armed forces during the Great War. This groundbreaking
study is the first to examine music's vital presence in a range of
military contexts including military camps, ships, aerodromes and
battlefields, canteen huts, hospitals and PoW camps. Emma Hanna
argues that music was omnipresent in servicemen's wartime existence
and was a vital element for the maintenance of morale. She shows
how music was utilised to stimulate recruitment and fundraising,
for diplomatic and propaganda purposes, and for religious,
educational and therapeutic reasons. Music was not in any way
ephemeral, it was unmatched in its power to cajole, console, cheer
and inspire during the conflict and its aftermath. This study is a
major contribution to our understanding of the wartime realities of
the British armed forces during the Great War.
In Britain since the 1960s television has been the most influential
medium of popular culture. Television is also the site where the
Western Front of popular culture clashes with the Western Front of
history. This book examines the ways in which those involved in the
production of historical documentaries for this most influential
media have struggled to communicate the stories of the First World
War to British audiences. Documents in the BBC Written Archives
Centre at Caversham, Berkshire, the Imperial War Museum, and the
Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives all inform the analysis.
Interviews and correspondence with television producers,
scriptwriters and production crew, as well as two First World War
veterans who appeared in several recent documentaries provide new
insights for the reader. Emma Hanna takes the reader behind the
scenes of the making of the most influential documentaries from the
landmark epic series The Great War (BBC, 1964) up to more recent
controversial productions such as The Trench (BBC, 2002) and Not
Forgotten: The Men Who Wouldn't Fight (BBC, 2008). By examining the
production, broadcast and reception of a number of British
television documentaries this book examines the difficult
relationship between the war's history and its popular memory.
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