#NVHOW20 Introducing Dr Joel Morley @JoelMMorley ‘Young men’s encounters with the Great War in interwar Britain’ - what they encountered, what left an impression, and how those impressions impact our understanding of the cultural legacy of the #GreatWar#FirstWorldWar#FWW
1 #NVHOW20 I'm using #oralhistory & @massobservation to explore how print representations of WW1 were experienced by men growing up in interwar Britain. Looking at what they read & what left an impression, rather than at texts, complicates understandings of WW1s cultural legacy.
2 #NVHOW20 All Quiet on the Western Front was prob. the most read war book but numerous popular novels depicted war as heroic & worthwhile sacrifice. A 'pleasure culture' of war as romantic adventure persisted in juvenile fiction. Reading was popular but what did young men read?
3 #NVHOW20 In 1932 an East Ham librarian said WW1 was ‘distressingly’ popular. It plausibly featured in 4 of 5 fav. topics: Adventure; War; Sea & Ships; History; & School Life. Non-fiction was unexpectedly important source by which my interviewees gained impressions of WW1.
4 #NVHOW20 1 read ‘every book in the library’ about air warfare because he ‘found them quite exciting.’ More had read about air aces than any other aspect, but Trench warfare was often encountered in multi-vol. sets like The Children’s Story of the Great War or War Illustrated.
5 #NVHOW20 Often given as gifts, they offered traditional representations of WW1: 1 interviewee remembered ‘pictures of the Boche bayoneting babies’; ‘myths of the Hun were perpetuated’. Victoria Cross winners’ actions were celebrated. BUT for some the pictures spoke 1000 words.
6 #NVHOW20 Readers found ‘Pleasure Culture’ in fiction: in 1926 Westerman, Strang or Henty were the favourite authors of 80% of boys in Croydon libraries. 1m+ Boys Story Papers were sold weekly & shared around. These were also remembered as representing WW1 as romantic adventure.
7 #NVHOW20 What about the “disenchanted” highbrow canon? 1 middle-class Mass Observation respondent said war poems were influential, but most felt they didn’t understand them or never saw them. The “anti-war” novels of the War Books Boom were often ambivalent, not anti-war.
8 #NVHOW20@JanetSKWatson found All Quiet resonated with those who ‘came of age just after’ WW1, who felt they could ‘know what really happened’. AQ was the novel most mentioned by my (younger) men, whose recollections suggest they saw war novels as impressions of reality:
9 #NVHOW20 ‘the basic principles of ‘em were true’. Still, ‘They were thrilling to a certain extent but at the same time you thought they was really horrendous you know’. The FWW remained captivating. IF AQ shaped my men's understandings it was more often the film (1930&esp 1939)
10 #NVHOW20 1 told MO he ‘was petrified with horror & disgust as I was later when I read the novel’. 1 interviewee ‘truly never thought of it as fiction’ & was ‘very much impressed’. Another saw the film showed the ‘futility of war’ but he had seen AQ ‘as entertainment’.
11 #NVHOW20 As entertainment it could be dismissed, esp since the same men saw an ‘exciting and wonderful […] war’ in Hells Angels & Dawn Patrol. Conclusion: Popular (esp illustrated) histories & BSPs were seen by young men & often provided their key impressions of WW1.
12 #NVHOW20 These were often part of the pleasure culture of war. Young men rarely encountered disenchanted lit & if they did it often didn’t displace their romantic imaginings. This should inform the weight we give it when assessing the cultural legacy of WW1 in interwar Britain
#NVHOW20 We survived one ‘friendly fire’ incident and the vagaries of internet connections in rural Gloucestershire, aka two tin cans and a length of string!
#NVHOW20 It’s been a fascinating afternoon. Please feel free to continue asking questions and discussing the presentations. @SocHistoryWar now has its AGM, beginning at 17:00. The keynote speech by @BeatriceHeuser on ‘Compassion and War’ will be available soon. Watch this space!
1 #NVHOW20 Let’s get started… You may know that in 2018 the British Armed Forces opened all roles to women, yet it is a myth to say that women are only now able to serve in ‘frontline combat’
2 #NVHOW20 Women have been distanced from ‘frontline combat’ by discursive constructions using their bodies to deny them agency and make their presence acceptable. Yet women have repeatedly transgressed the front-line, demonstrating agency in their participation.
#NVHOW20 Introducing Francesca Hooft @FrancescaHooft@UtrechtUni ‘Hippocrates under arms: adaptation, cooperation, and agency’ - the experiences and agency of Dutch military medical personnel in post 1990 peace, combat, and humanitarian missions #oralhistory#UNpeacekeeping
1 #NVHOW20 Good afternoon! My name is Francesca Hooft and I’m a PhD candidate @UniUtrecht. I research the changing role of military medical personnel within the Dutch armed forces in deployments between 1990 and 2010, focussing on physicians’ and nurses’ personal experiences.
2 #NVHOW20 The position of medical personnel within the armed forces has always been considered ambiguous and problematic. The military demands a high level of obedience and loyalty. Hierarchy may impede agency to act according to medical professional values and standards.
#NVHOW20 Introducing Dr Victoria Woodman @v_woodman ‘Waiting is the Women’s Role: the Falklands Conflict media representation of Royal Navy Wives’ - media coverage and their representation as a homogeneous
1 #NVHOW20 How were Task Force families portrayed in newspapers and television reports during the Falklands Conflict? Much has been written on how the media accompanied the task force, the journalists sent, the MoD release of news and the political attacks made on the media.
2 #NVHOW20 Fifty naval wives interviewed for my research stated that the primary method of receiving updates on the conflict was through the media. The media reports portrayed them at the time in terms of loyalty. Gender divisions were distinctly defined; men/battle, women/home.
1 #NVHOW20 Five companies produced British newsreels in #WWII holding a monopoly over the British newsreel industry. In 1937 they set up the Newsreel Association of Great Britain & Ireland (NRA). Most communication between the companies & the government was through the NRA.
2 #NVHOW20 The NRA’s purpose was:'...to promote & protect the interests...of associates engaged in the production & distribution of...Newsreels...& to bring about & maintain co-operation'. One of the primary concerns for wartime newsreels was censorship. [Image: @MediaMuseum]
#NVHOW20 Introducing Jonathan Ruffle @JonathanRuffle ‘TOMMIES’ – The First World War as BBC Radio Drama’- the conception and building of the 11th November 1918 episode of the @BBCRadio4 drama set 150 miles up the Dvina River in northern Russia #FWW#WW1#FirstWorldWar
1 #NVHOW20 Hi #twitterhistorians. I'm @JonathanRuffle. I created, co-wrote and co-produced a 42-episode real-time BBC Radio 4 drama called TOMMIES about the First World War.
2 #NVHOW20 Our 1918 Armistice Day episode was set in Russia with the 2/10 Battalion Royal Scots up the Dvina River. But I started where we all do.