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Afterlives documents the lives and historical pursuits of the
generations who grew up in Australia, Britain and Germany after the
First World War. Although they were not direct witnesses to the
conflict, they experienced its effects from their earliest years.
Based on ninety oral history interviews and observation during the
First World War Centenary, this pioneering study reveals the
contribution of descendants to the contemporary memory of the First
World War, and the intimate personal legacies of the conflict that
animate their history-making. -- .
What did home mean to British soldiers and how did it help them to
cope with the psychological strains of the Great War? Family
relationships lie at the heart of this book. It explores the
contribution letters and parcels from home played in maintaining
the morale of this largely young, amateur army. And it shows how
soldiers, in their turn, sought to adapt domestic habits to the
trenches. Pursuing the unconscious clues within a rich collection
of letters and memoirs with the help of psychoanalytical ideas,
including those formulated by the veteran tank commander Wilfred
Bion, this study asks fundamental questions about the psychological
resources of this generation of young men. It reveals how the
extremities of battle exposed the deepest emotional ties of
childhood, and went on marking the post-war domestic lives of those
who returned. -- .
War memory and commemoration have had increasingly high profiles in
public and academic debates in recent years. This volume examines
some of the social changes which have led to this development,
among them the passing of the two World Wars from survivor into
cultural memory. Focusing on the politics of war memory and
commemoration, the book illuminates the struggle to install
particular memories at the centre of a cultural world, and offers
an extensive argument about how the politics of commemoration
practices should be understood.
Contents: Part I. Framing the Issues 1. The politics of war memory and commemoration: contexts, structures and dynamics T.G. Ashplant, Graham Dawson and Michael Roper Part II. Case Studies 2. Layers of memory: twenty years after in Argentina Elizabeth Jelin and Susana G. Kaufman 3. The South African War/Anglo-Boer War 1899-1902 and political memory in South Africa Bill Nasson 4. National narratives, war commemoration, and racial exclusion in a settler society: the Australian case Ann Curthoys 5. 'This is where they fought': Finnish war landscapes as a national heritage Petri J. Raivo 6. Remembered/Replayed: the nation and male subjectivity in the Second World War films, Ni Liv (Norway) and The Cruel Sea (Britain) Peter Sjølyst-Jackson 7. Postmemory cinema: second-generation Israelis screen the Holocaust in Don't Touch My Holocaust Yosefa Loshitzky 8. Hauntings: memory, fiction, and the Portuguese Colonial Wars Paulo de Medeiros 9. Longing for war: nostalgia and Australian returned soldiers after the First World War Stephen Garton 10. Involuntary commemorations: post-traumatic stress disorder and its relationship to war commemoration Jo Stanley Part III. Debates and Reviews 11. War commemoration in Western Europe: changing meanings, divisive loyalties, unheard voices T.G. Ashplant
The post-war period is often regarded as a time when Britain
underwent its managerial revolution, the family firm and the
"gentleman amateur" giving way to the large bureaucracy and the
trained management expert. Yet the conception of modern management
as an objective process could hardly be further from the truth.
Drawing on detailed life-history interviews with the post-war
generation of "organization men", this study explores the
intimacies that operate among men in management. It argues that
despite the rise of professional management, relations between
managers continue to function in highly subjective ways. The
pleasure of technical innovation or of seeing a new product through
to the market, the mixture of rivalry and patronage that surrounds
management succession, the hard bargaining of industrial relations:
at every level, managerial functions involve the dramatization of
emotions among men. By challenging the enduring myth of the
rational organization man, this book sheds new light on gender
segregation in management. It argues that the exclusion of women
from senior positions cannot be understood simply as the outcome of
unprofessional practices. A focus on the emotional relations
between male managers reveals the psychic dimensions of
exclusionary behaviour. An "emotional economy" flourishes among men
in management, but its workings have been hidden by the myth of the
rational organization man.
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Chasing the Miracle (Paperback)
J. Michael Roper; Cover design or artwork by Angela M Roper; Contributions by J'Von Cox
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R578
Discovery Miles 5 780
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Masculine assertions, whether of verbal command, political power or physical violence, have formed the traditional subject matter of history. This volume combines current discussions in sexual politics with historical analysis to demonstrate that, far from being natural and monolithic, masculinity is an historical and cultural construct, with varied, competing and above all changing forms.;The contributors draw on literature, cultural studies and sociology to explore the history and representations of masculinity from 1800 to the 1980s, with examples ranging from Thomas Carlyle and the 19th-century "man of letters" to the post-World War II "company man". Making men visible as gendered subjects within the accepted historical categories of family, business and labour, class and nation, the text describes how - in the past as in the contemporary world - masculinities need to be understood as subjective identity, as social power and as cultural representation.
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