A Distant Grief: Australians, War Graves and the Great WarSixty thousand Australians died during the First World War. This book is the first major study to examine the roles of war graves and cemeteries in private grief and mourning, through archival research of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the organization responsible for commemorating the million soldiers of the British Empire who died in the war. A Distant Grief reorients and enriches international discussion of reactions to death and commemoration during, and after, the First World War. The author, Bart Ziino, has written on war memorials, Gallipoli, and the Australian memory of war. The thesis on which this book is based won the 2005 Australian Historical Association's Serle Award for the best thesis in Australian History. |
From inside the book
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Page 62
... Turks now in command of the peninsula would regard the graves ' with all due reverence ' . The Turks were , after all , ' chivalrous foes , and they have shown the same respect for our dead as for our living , though from different ...
... Turks now in command of the peninsula would regard the graves ' with all due reverence ' . The Turks were , after all , ' chivalrous foes , and they have shown the same respect for our dead as for our living , though from different ...
Page 72
... Turk declined again into suspicion and fear . To be fair , British officials detected among Turks a deep conviction that the cemeteries were ' a cloak for ulterior and sinister designs'.70 As the crisis passed , and the Turks looked for ...
... Turk declined again into suspicion and fear . To be fair , British officials detected among Turks a deep conviction that the cemeteries were ' a cloak for ulterior and sinister designs'.70 As the crisis passed , and the Turks looked for ...
Page 80
... Turks would take part in the Anzac service at Gallipoli . More importantly , a Melbourne news- paper solicited a message from Turkish President Mustapha Kemal for Anzac Day 1934. Kemal told Australians that the world had seen the ...
... Turks would take part in the Anzac service at Gallipoli . More importantly , a Melbourne news- paper solicited a message from Turkish President Mustapha Kemal for Anzac Day 1934. Kemal told Australians that the world had seen the ...
Contents
Imagined Graves | 12 |
The Sacred Obligation | 36 |
Gallipoli and Australian Anxiety | 59 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
anxiety Anzac Day ANZAC Day Commemoration Argus asserted August Australian Graves Services Australian mourners Australian soldiers Australian War Memorial battlefields bereaved Australians bereaved relatives bodies British burial buried C. E. W. Bean cemeteries comfort Commission's Commonwealth comrades Cross Cross of Sacrifice CWGC Day Commemoration Committee death December Defence died distance Empire erected expression Fabian Ware fallen France Gallipoli George Graves Commission Graves Registration grieving headstone honour Hughes imagine Imperial War Graves insisted IWGC January John Oxenham July June London Lone Pine loved March Melbourne Memoriam missing mother mourning Mullineux National November October official organisation overseas Pearce peninsula photographs pilgrimage pilgrims Prime Minister private grief realised recognised remained Remembrance reported responsibility resting place sacred sacrifice sentiment September 1921 son's Sun News-Pictorial Sydney Morning Herald symbolism thousands Trumble Turks University of Melbourne unknown Venn-Brown Villers-Bretonneux W. M. Hughes Western Front wrote Zealand