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[Commlist] New book: World War I: Media, Entertainments & Popular Culture
Tue Nov 12 21:49:37 GMT 2019
We would like to bring attention to a publication which we hope will be
of interest to researchers and students of media, journalism, film,
cartoons, music, childrens literature, radio, ethics, propaganda,
newspapers, heroines, espionage, romance, nationalism and pacifism
during World War 1.
*World War I: Media, Entertainments & Popular Culture.*
Edited by Chris Hart. (2018). ISBN (pbk) 978-1-905984-21-3
*Contents*
*Introduction***
Christopher Hart
Chapter 1***What Shall We Tell the Children? The Great War, Propaganda,
and British Children*
Michael Paris
Chapter 2***Remember Scarborough. Re-Active Propaganda as Natural ethics*
Christopher Hart
Chapter 3 *Causing Unnecessary Anxiety? British Newspapers and the Battle *
* of ****Jutland*
Guy Hodgson
Chapter 4 *Listening to ‘Concert of Europe’: Pioneering Radio Amateurs
During *
* World War I*
Maria Rikitianskaia
Chapter 5 *The Role of Political Posters in Montenegro and Serbia during *
* World War I*
Andrijana Rabrenović
Chapter 6***Basque Writers’ Reportages in * */Eskualduna/**, during
World War I *
Eneko Bidegain
Chapter 7 *How Local Newspapers Scooped the National Press to Tell the
Truth about the First World War***
John Dilley and David Penman
Chapter 8 *Romance by Other Means: Scottish Popular Newspapers and the
First *
* World War*
David Goldie
Chapter 9***“And Yet They Tell Us Not to Hate the Hun” Atrocity
Propaganda, and War Patriotism in Winsor McCay’s
**/The Sinking of the ‘Lusitania’/*
Jesús Jiménez-Varea and Antonio Pineda
Chapter**10***The Murdochs and Gallipoli: Entertainments in Service of Myth*
Tom D. C. Roberts
Chapter 11***All Quiet on the Musical Front? German Music Production as
a Source *
* for a History of Attitudes of the First World War*
**
Dietrich Helms
Chapter 12***Englishness and the ‘Other’. Mata Hari and Edith Cavell* *On *
* Celluloid*
Rosie White
Chapter 13***Defining Musical ‘Germanness’. The Reciprocal Influences of
Music *
* and National Identity Formation*
Lucy Claire Church
**
Chapter 14 *Dichotomies of Representation and Interpretation. A Pacifist’s *
* Story*
Sonja Andrew
**
The chapters in this volume have their origins in the conference /World
War I: The Media, Entertainments & Popular Culture /held at the
University of Chester between the 2^nd - 3^rd July 2015. The organisers
and chairs of sessions were, including me, Jim Aulich, Manchester School
of Art, Craig Horner, Manchester Metropolitan University, Carole
O'Reilly, University of Salford, Nick Mansfield, UCLAN, Gaynor Bagnall,
University of Salford, and Vera Slavtcheva-Petkova, University of Liverpool.
This conference did not try to trivialise the First World War. Whether
it was civilian, serviceman or servicewoman popular mass entertainments
had a part to play in their lives. The conference was about the
relationship between popular and mass entertainments during the war and
the use of the war for mass audience productions. It aimed to examine
the role, form and development of entertainments created during and
related to it, post-1918. The music hall, the singers, performers, the
cartoons, romantic novels, and cinema all had a place and role to
contemporaries. By 1915 many of these may have relayed the experience
of war, and some provided the means to maintain morale and patriotism.
Not all, however, supported the war. After one year of the initial war,
optimism was confronted with the realisation that this war was different
to others - the number of wounded and killed was shockingly high.
English coastal towns were bombarded by German battleships, while other
cities were bombed by German airships. Given the reality of the war,
the kinds of questions discussed include the following. How did popular
entertainments react to the war? What were the dynamics, politics and
reception of different positions? In what ways did the form of mass
entertainments change as the war progressed? What role did technology
have in disseminating entertainments? How did commercial entertainment
enterprises use the war to attract audiences?
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