ABSTRACT

Matters of Conflict looks at the definitive invention of the twentieth century - industrialised war - and its vast and varied material legacy. From trench art and postcards through avant-garde art, museum collections and prosthetic limbs to battlefield landscapes, the book examines the First World War and its significance through the things it left behind. The contributions come from a multidisciplinary perspective, uniting previously compartmentalized disciplines such as anthropology, archaeology, cultural history, museology and art history in their focus on material culture. This innovative, hybrid approach investigates the 'social life' of objects in order to understand them as they move through time and space and intersect the lives of all who came in contact with them.
The resulting survey sets a new agenda for study of the First World War, and ultimately of all twentieth-century conflict.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |21 pages

Material culture and conflict

The Great War, 1914–2003

chapter |9 pages

Art, Material Life and Disaster

Civilian and military prisoners of war

chapter |16 pages

‘Sacred Relics'

Objects in the Imperial War Museum 1917–39

chapter |11 pages

Prostheses and propaganda

Materiality and the human body in the Great War

chapter |10 pages

Nagelfiguren

Nailing patriotism in Germany 1914–18

chapter |18 pages

Shattered experiences – recycled relics

Strategies of representation and the legacy of the Great War

chapter |19 pages

The Great War Re-Remembered

The fragmentation of the world's largest painting

chapter |14 pages

Death and Material Culture

The case of pictures during the First World War 1

chapter |11 pages

A Material Link Between War and Peace

First World War silk postcards

chapter |15 pages

‘Thanks for the memory'

War memorials, spectatorship and the trajectories of commemoration 1919–2001

chapter |17 pages

The lion, the angel and the war memorial

Some French sites revisited

chapter |13 pages

The Internet and the Great War

The impact on the making and meaning of Great War history

chapter |13 pages

The Ocean Villas project

Archaeology in the service of European remembrance

chapter |15 pages

Aftermath

Materiality on the Home Front, 1914–2001