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War remains: contributions of the Imperial War Graves Commission and the Australian War Records Section to material and national cultures of conflict and commemoration

Authors :
William Taylor
Source :
National Identities. 17:217-240
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2015.

Abstract

The Imperial (subsequently the Commonwealth) War Graves Commission (IWGC) was established in 1917 comprising member countries of the former British Empire. The organisation was charged with providing appropriate memorials to commemorate the Empire’s war dead, individually and equally, without regard for military rank, class or nationality. This was no easy task given the numbers of dead from multiple theatres of war, the variety and oftentimes competing demands of imperial and national war offices, and the uncertain aesthetics arising from individually attuned and publically oriented commemorative intentions. Equally caught up in the mix of agencies and design practices were hordes of war trophies, captured artillery and military relics retrieved from battlefields across Europe, items carefully catalogued and preserved by the British War Office (BWO) and offspring agencies to provide artefacts for building memorials in Commonwealth states. This paper describes the work of the IWGC during and immediately f...

Details

ISSN :
14699907 and 14608944
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
National Identities
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2d0e0d15e1330863fb72d9bef195f1a7